Our best chance of finding intelligent life out there in the Universe that we could even hope to have any communications with is if there’s a planet orbiting around the nearest star to Earth just over 4 light years away.
4 years for a message to travel there, and 4 more years for any message to travel back. That is the alpha Centauri system of 3 stars: there’s two Sun-like stars, Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B, that orbit each other, plus the technically closest star to us, Proxima Centauri, a faint red dwarf star, which orbits the other two.
Now while there has been much excitement about the 2 (maybe 3) planets discovered orbiting Proxima Centauri, as we gather more evidence from other stars, its looking less likely that red dwarf stars are good places to look for life because of the harmful x-ray radiation they give off.
But all hope is not lost because there’s also those two Sun-like stars in the same system, but as yet no planets around them have been found, until now, thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope, with these two research papers published last month by Beichman and collaborators and Sanghi and collaborators claiming to have found a candidate gas giant exoplanet orbiting Alpha Centauri A.
But it is only a candidate for now, it’s not a confirmed discovery just yet, so why is that…?