Science / habitable planet Kepler Results Boost Chances of Finding Alien Life For every two suns, an Earth-like planet By Evann Gastaldo, Newser Staff Posted Feb 21, 2011 3:28 PM CST Updated Feb 21, 2011 5:15 AM CST Copied This image taken by the Kepler telescope and released by NASA April 16, 2009, shows an expansive, 100-square-degree patch of sky in our Milky Way galaxy where it hopes to find Earth-like planets. (AP Photo/NASA/JPL CALTECH) Exciting news for alien enthusiasts: The discovery by NASA scientists of a vast trove of Earth-like planets orbiting distant suns boosts our chances of finding extraterrestrial life. Findings from the Kepler telescope revealed that for every two stars in the universe, one has an Earth-like "candidate planet" orbiting it, the Telegraph reports. Says a chief Kepler scientist, "I am really delighted that we are seeing so many candidate planets and that means there is a rich ocean of planets out there to explore." Before this, just two potentially habitable planets had been discovered outside our solar system. (More habitable planet stories.) Report an error