Science | Europe
ESA-Led PLATO Mission Prepares to Hunt for Earth-Like Exoplanets
Europe's PLATO satellite, set for final preparations in 2026, will search for rocky planets around sun-like stars in the habitable zone.
Searching for Earth's Twin: ESA's PLATO Mission and the Quest for Life Beyond Our Solar System
The European Space Agency's PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars mission — PLATO — is advancing through its final integration and testing phase ahead of a planned launch in late 2026, with scientists and space enthusiasts alike anticipating the mission's potential to transform our understanding of planetary systems around sun-like stars. PLATO is specifically designed to detect and characterise rocky planets in the habitable zone — the range of orbital distances where liquid water could exist on a planet's surface — around hundreds of thousands of stars similar to our own sun.
The mission's scientific design reflects lessons learned from its predecessors, particularly NASA's Kepler mission and the joint NASA-ESA TESS mission. PLATO combines a large field of view — it will simultaneously observe hundreds of thousands of stars for extended periods — with the precision needed to detect the tiny dip in stellar brightness caused by a planet the size of Earth passing in front of its host star. Crucially, it will also measure stellar oscillations, providing precise measurements of host star properties including size, mass, and age that allow planetary parameters to be determined with unprecedented accuracy.
The question of whether Earth-like planets are common or rare in the universe is one of the most profound in science, with implications not only for our understanding of planetary formation and the evolution of stellar systems, but also for the likelihood that life — and perhaps intelligent life — exists elsewhere in the cosmos. PLATO's survey is expected to yield thousands of planetary candidate detections, including dozens that will be prime targets for follow-up characterisation with future telescopes including the European Extremely Large Telescope and the next generation of space observatories.