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mihailovalexandr: Massive, rocky worlds called 'super-Earths' even those orbiting searingly close to their stars may provide the right conditions for life, new research suggests. At up to 15 times the mass of Earth, the rocky bodies are bigger and easier to...
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Massive, rocky worlds called 'super-Earths' even those orbiting searingly close to their stars may provide the right conditions for life, new research suggests. At up to 15 times the mass of Earth, the rocky bodies are bigger and easier to spot than Earth-sized worlds, which have yet to be detected.
Massive, rocky worlds called 'super-Earths' even those orbiting searingly close to their stars may provide the right conditions for life, new research suggests. At up to 15 times the mass of Earth, the rocky bodies are bigger and easier to spot than Earth-sized worlds, which have yet to be detected.
Massive, rocky worlds called 'super-Earths' even those orbiting searingly close to their stars may provide the right conditions for life, new research suggests. At up to 15 times the mass of Earth, the rocky bodies are bigger and easier to spot than Earth-sized worlds, which have yet to be detected.
Massive, rocky worlds called 'super-Earths' even those orbiting searingly close to their stars may provide the right conditions for life, new research suggests. At up to 15 times the mass of Earth, the rocky bodies are bigger and easier to spot than Earth-sized worlds, which have yet to be detected.
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