The alien worlds, all orbiting a Sun-like star located within the constellation Aquarius, are considered super- Earths, sizing in at two to three times larger than our own planet, researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US said.
All five exoplanets are likely scorchingly hot: Each planet comes incredibly close to its star, streaking around in just 13 days at most - a whirlwind of an orbit compared with Earth's 365-day year, they said.
The size of each planet's orbit appears to be a ratio of the other orbits, suggesting that all five planets originally formed together in a smooth, rotating disc, and over eons migrated closer in towards their star.
The researchers, including those at The California Institute of Technology in the US, say the credit for this planetary discovery goes mainly to the citizen scientists - about 10,000 from the around the world.
They pored through publicly available data from K2, a follow-on to NASA's Kepler Space Telescope mission, which since 2009 has observed the sky for signs of Earth-like planets orbiting Sun-like stars.
The project was inspired by a similar effort via Zooniverse called Planet Hunters, which has enabled users to sift through and classify both Kepler and K2 data.
For the Exoplanet Explorers project, researchers first ran a signal-detection algorithm to identify potential transit signals in the K2 data, then made those signals available on the Zooniverse platform.
They designed a training programme to first teach users what to look for in determining whether a signal is a planetary transit.
Users could then sift through actual light curves from the K2 mission and click "yes" or "no," depending on whether they thought the curve looked like a transit.
"We put all this data online and said to the public, 'Help us find some planets,'" said Ian Crossfield, assistant professor of physics at MIT.
"It is exciting, because we are getting the public excited about science, and it is really leveraging the power of the human cloud," Crossfield said.
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