Milky Way Likely Has Tens of Billions of Rocky "Super-Earths"
Astronomers at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) say new data indicates there is an abundance of rocky Super-Earth-type planets orbiting in the habitable zones of a common type of star known as a red dwarf. They estimate there are tens of billions within our Milky Way galaxy alone.
Super-earth is the term astronomers use to describe a type of rocky planet outside our solar system - an exoplanet - that measures less than 10 times the mass of the Earth.