All About Space

EXTRAGALACTIC PLANETS

We should count ourselves lucky. For thousands of years humans have gazed up at the night sky, wondering whether or not we are alone. We are among the first generations to know for sure that our Solar System is just one of many strung out across the vast cosmos. Our discovery of around 4,000 alien worlds dancing around distant stars - known as exoplanets - over the last three decades has quite rightly been lauded. It’s a wonderful achievement that helps put us in our astronomical place. The haul has thrown up a zoo of exciting and enchanting worlds, from those that dance around two suns to planets with diamond rain, bubbling metal lava and possibly even liquid water.

Despite the accolades, these discoveries are rarely put into their true context. It is easy to forget just how much of the universe’s real estate remains unexplored. All of the confirmed planets found to date reside in our own Milky Way galaxy, and in our tiny corner of it to boot. There are around 2 trillion other galaxies in the observable universe. To see how much we’ve poked around in so far, imagine that this hoard of galaxies is represented by the total land area of the Earth. On that scale, our Milky Way accounts for the space taken up by the average UK bungalow. The area that includes the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from All About Space

All About Space14 min read
News From Around The Universe
This billowing mass of dust filaments and gas tendrils stretching across 100 light years of space is the Vela supernova remnant – the scattered ashes of a star that exploded about 11,000 years ago. The image was acquired by the Dark Energy Camera (DE
All About Space3 min read
This Month’s Planets
Uranus is a truly fascinating world – a slow-moving, faraway ‘ice giant’ planet much larger and colder than our own lush, green Earth. Because it’s so faint, many amateur astronomers and skywatchers have never actually seen it themselves, but this mo
All About Space5 min read
Ask Space
Astrobotany is going to be critical for future space exploration, particularly in the realm of providing caloric support for extended spaceflight missions. In the near future it’s unlikely we will use plants as an oxygen source in a bioregenerative l

Related