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Google and NASA have joined hands to identify which two new planets around distant stars?
Kepler 80g, Kepler 90i
Kepler 90g, Kepler 80i
Kepler 81g, Kepler 90i
Kepler 90i, Kepler 82g
Kepler-90i (also known by its Kepler Object of Interest designation KOI-351 i) is a super-Earth exoplanet with a radius 1.32 that of Earth, orbiting the early G-type main-sequence star Kepler-90 every 14.45 days, discovered by NASA's Kepler spacecraft. It is located about 2,545 light-years (780 parsecs, or nearly 2.4078×1016 km) from Earth in the constellation Draco. The exoplanet is the eighth in the star's multi-planetary system. As of December 2017, Kepler-90 is the star hosting the most exoplanets found. Kepler-90i was found with the transit method, in which the dimming effect that a planet causes as it crosses in front of its star is measured, and by a newly utilized computer tool, deep learning, a class of machine learning algorithms.
By: DATTA DINKAR CHAVAN ProfileResourcesReport error
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