Astronomers have discovered a planet orbiting two starts in a system.

Astronomers have discovered a planet orbiting two starts in a system.

Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered a planet orbiting two stars in a system located about 8,000 light-years away towards the centre of our galaxy.

The planet orbits roughly 300 million miles from the stellar duo, about the distance from the asteroid belt to our Sun. It completes an orbit around both stars roughly every seven years, researchers said. The two red dwarf stars in the system OGLE-2007-BLG-349 are a mere 7 million miles apart, or 14 times the diameter of the Moon's orbit around Earth.

The Hubble observations represent the first time such a three-body system has been confirmed using the gravitational micro-lensing technique, researchers said. Gravitational micro-lensing occurs when the gravity of a foreground star bends and amplifies the light of a background star that momentarily aligns with it.

The particular character of the light magnification can unveil clues to the nature of the foreground star and any associated planets. The three objects were discovered in 2007 by an international collaboration of five different groups: Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics (MOA), the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE), the Microlensing Follow-up Network (MicroFUN), the Probing Lensing Anomalies Network (PLANET), and the Robonet Collaboration.

These ground-based observations uncovered a star and a planet, but a detailed analysis also showed a third body that astronomers could not definitively identify.

"The ground-based observations suggested two possible scenarios for the three-body system: a Saturn-mass planet orbiting a close binary star pair or a Saturn-mass and an

Earth-mass planet orbiting a single star," said David Bennett of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre. The sharpness of the Hubble images allowed the research team to separate the background source star and the lensing star from their neighbours in the very crowded star field. The Hubble observations showed that the starlight from the foreground lens system was too faint to be a single star, but it had the brightness expected for two closely orbiting red dwarf stars, which are fainter and less massive than our Sun.

"So, the model with two stars and one planet is the only one consistent with the Hubble data," Bennett said. Bennett's team conducted the follow-up observations with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2.

"We were helped in the analysis by the almost perfect alignment of the foreground binary stars with the background star, which greatly magnified the light and allowed us to see the signal of the two stars," Bennett said.

NASA Kepler space observatory has discovered 10 other planets orbiting tight binary stars, but these are all much closer to their stars than the one studied by Hubble.