One of our closest celestial neighbors is a warm, rocky world, scientists say.

Writing in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics, scientists report the discovery of an Earth-size exoplanet orbiting the star Ross 128, a dim red dwarf just 11 light-years away.

The newfound world, dubbed Ross 128 b, is the closest temperate planet known to orbit a โ€œquiet starโ€ โ€” one that isnโ€™t prone to devastating and potentially life-obliterating bursts of radiation.

And it appears to meet some of the basic requirements for habitability. The planet is slightly more massive than Earth, so it is probably a rocky world with a solid surface. The host star is much cooler and fainter than our sun, but Ross 128 b orbits it closely and quickly โ€” a year lasts just 9.9 days. The planet receives about 38 percent more radiation than Earth does โ€” enough to give it an equilibrium temperature between -76 and 68 degrees Fahrenheit, assuming it has an Earthlike atmosphere (and thatโ€™s a huge assumption).

Though the study authors call Ross 128 b a โ€œtemperate planet,โ€ itโ€™s not clear whether it falls within the habitable zone โ€” the Goldilocks region where a planet is just warm enough for liquid water to exist on its surface.

Additionally, no current telescopes are capable of analyzing the wavelengths of light coming from the planet, which might provide clues about the existence of an atmosphere and the potential for life. But when the powerful 39-meter Extremely Large Telescope comes online in 2024, this world will be one of its first targets.

Ross 128 b is not Earthโ€™s nearest extrasolar neighbor. The exoplanet Proxima b, which orbits the star next door to our sun, is even closer than Ross 128 b โ€” just 4.2 light-years away. But its host star, a red dwarf called Proxima Centauri, has been compared to a hormonal teenager. It produces violent flares of radiation that can strip away an atmosphere and sterilize a planet. You would not be a happy camper if you lived in the vicinity.

Ross 128 is more like a 30-something with a good job, a membership in a yoga studio and an extensive collection of James Taylor albums. You could probably trust it not to fry its own planet.

Indeed, Ross 128 is so agreeable that itโ€™s actually heading toward us. According to Nicola Astudillo-Defru, an astronomer at the University of Geneva and co-author of the study, the starโ€™s orbit through the galaxy has put it on a path toward Earth. In 71,000 years, it will become our closest neighbor, and Ross 128 will be the closest temperate planet.

Ross 128 b was detected via the High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher, or HARPS, a planet-seeking program based at La Silla Observatory in Chile. As most exoplanets are too distant and too dim to be seen directly, HARPS looks for the telltale signature of a small world orbiting a star. Remember, a planet doesnโ€™t really orbit its sun. Rather, both the planet and the sun orbit their common center of mass โ€” the point at which the gravitational forces they exert on each other are at equilibrium. Since stars are so much heftier than planets, that center of mass is a whole lot closer to the star than to the planet, but it is not exactly in the starโ€™s middle. This produces a characteristic โ€œwobble.โ€

All this wobbling affects the radiation these stars emit: The light changes frequency, much the way a sound changes pitch when its source is moving โ€” a phenomenon known as the Doppler Effect.

Using this technique, the scientists at La Silla sorted through night after night of observations of the star Ross 128, looking for evidence of a Doppler effect. After capturing the star at more than 150 points in time, they determined that they had enough evidence to confirm the presence of a planet.

Noting that this is just the latest exoplanet discovery of thousands, Astudillo-Defru acknowledged that this one โ€œmay feel like one more among others.โ€ But no other exoplanet known to science is as close and as seemingly hospitable as Ross 128 b.

โ€œThis one is special,โ€ Astudillo-Defru added.

To date, NASAโ€™s Exoplanet Archive includes 3,550 confirmed alien worlds. There are even millions of โ€œEarth twinsโ€ โ€” worlds that, from a distance, look not unlike our own.