Red Dwarf Stars May Be Best Chance for Habitable Alien Planets
Stars known as red dwarfs might have larger habitable zones friendly to  ‘life as we know it’ than once thought, researchers say.
Red dwarfs, also known as M stars, are dim compared to stars like our  sun and are just 10 to 20 percent as massive. They make up roughly  three-quarters of the stars in the galaxy, and recently scientists found  red dwarfs are far more common than before thought, making up at least 80 percent of the total number of stars.
The fact that red dwarfs are so very common has made astrobiologists wonder if they might be the best chance for discovering planets habitable to life as we know it. More and more planets are getting discovered around red  dwarfs — for instance, a potentially habitable “super-Earth” at least  4.5 times the mass of Earth, GJ 667Cb, was recently found orbiting the red dwarf GJ 667C.
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Red Dwarf Stars May Be Best Chance for Habitable Alien Planets

Stars known as red dwarfs might have larger habitable zones friendly to ‘life as we know it’ than once thought, researchers say.

Red dwarfs, also known as M stars, are dim compared to stars like our sun and are just 10 to 20 percent as massive. They make up roughly three-quarters of the stars in the galaxy, and recently scientists found red dwarfs are far more common than before thought, making up at least 80 percent of the total number of stars.

The fact that red dwarfs are so very common has made astrobiologists wonder if they might be the best chance for discovering planets habitable to life as we know it. More and more planets are getting discovered around red dwarfs — for instance, a potentially habitable “super-Earth” at least 4.5 times the mass of Earth, GJ 667Cb, was recently found orbiting the red dwarf GJ 667C.

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