Exoplanets: 30 years from 1 to over 6,000
Posted: October 9th, 2025, 11:45 pm
https://www.space.com/astronomy/exoplan ... exoplanets
"We've found 6,000 planets, but none of them are like Earth," said Aurora Kesseli, an astronomer at Caltech who works on NASA's Exoplanet Archive keeping a tally of the worlds already discovered, in an interview with Space.com. "So when people ask why we are still looking for exoplanets when we have found 6,000 of them, it's because we haven't found an Earth-like planet yet. But there are a lot of the upcoming missions that are really tuned-in to try and find something that actually looks like Earth."
"We've found 6,000 planets, but none of them are like Earth," said Aurora Kesseli, an astronomer at Caltech who works on NASA's Exoplanet Archive keeping a tally of the worlds already discovered, in an interview with Space.com. "So when people ask why we are still looking for exoplanets when we have found 6,000 of them, it's because we haven't found an Earth-like planet yet. But there are a lot of the upcoming missions that are really tuned-in to try and find something that actually looks like Earth."