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'Found you!' Astronomers spot faintest exoplanet ever seen from Earth after a decade of hide-and-seek

Astronomers have identified the faintest exoplanet ever imaged from Earth, marking the end of a decade-long search.

6sources
6articles
4velocity
+31%since first seen
13h agofirst detected

🌍 Cross-language spread

This story first appeared in 🇩🇪 German coverage — 8.1 hours before headlinez.news detected it in English news.

🇬🇧 English Jul 15, 20:07 UTC
🇩🇪 German Jul 15, 12:00 UTC · idw - Informationsdienst Wissenschaft

Detected by matching proper nouns and figures that survive translation. Times reflect when each edition's coverage was first indexed.

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The brief

Astronomers have identified a previously hidden exoplanet orbiting a young star. The discovery follows a decade-long observation process, with the planet appearing as a mysterious spot in telescope imagery.

Coverage from outlets including Smithsonian Magazine, ScienceAlert, Phys.org, ABC News, NASA Science, and Space emphasizes the unexpected nature of the find. Reports note that the planet was identified after more than 10 years of monitoring, with NASA's Webb space telescope playing a key role in the discovery.

Future developments depend on further analysis of the planet and the star system it orbits. Coverage does not yet specify the technical characteristics of the planet or the name of the star system involved.

Synthesized by headlinez.news from the headlines below under a strict no-invention contract. ✓ fact-checked: all claims supported by sources Updated just now.

Quick answers

What makes this exoplanet discovery significant?

It is documented as the faintest exoplanet ever imaged from Earth.

How long did it take to find the planet?

The planet was found after a decade of observation.

What equipment was used for the discovery?

NASA's Webb telescope is identified as having discovered the planet.

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