It's official: Humans have found 6,000 planets beyond our solar system

Just two decades after astronomers discovered the first exoplanet, NASA has confirmed the existence of 6,000 alien worlds. The total will rise even quicker as next-generation telescopes take flight.

A grid showing over a hundred different exoplanet illustrations
Exoplanet science has reached another milestone. NASA has announced that there are now 6,000 confirmed exoplanets. They vary widely in type and size, and in what types of stars they orbit.
(Image credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center)

The age of exoplanets began in 1992, when astronomers detected a pair of planets orbiting a pulsar. Then, in 1995, astronomers discovered the first exoplanet orbiting a main sequence star. As NASA's Kepler and TESS missions got going, the number of confirmed exoplanets continued to rise.

By 2015, NASA announced that Kepler had discovered its 1000th exoplanet. 2016 was a banner year for exoplanet detections with nearly 1500 in that year alone. The total number reached 5000 in March of 2022. Now, NASA has announced that there are 6,000 confirmed exoplanets.

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Evan Gough
Writer, Universe Today

Evan Gough is a science communicator who organizes and produce content that helps readers discover the fascinating planet, solar system, galaxy and universe we inhabit. He cover everything from the scientific triumphs of Mars rovers, to getting humans back to the Moon, to the mysterious nature of black holes.

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