In some science fiction or fantasy books, there characters that live in planets with more than one sun or a moon. However, while several moons can revolve around a planet, there has been no actual proof of a planet revolving around more than one sun - until now.

Space.com noted that scientists have known that some planets revolve around two or more stars, but this is the first time that they ever confirmed such discovery of a "circumbinary planet," thanks to a natural phenomenon called gravitational microlensing, or the bonding of light which was caused by strong gravity around objects that are in space. In these kinds of systems, two stars orbit a common center of mass, and when one star passes in front of the other, gravity from the closer star bends and magnifies its light, from our perspective here on Earth. Astronomers who studied this distorted light were able to find clues about stars in the foreground and potential planets orbiting the star system.

The exoplanet was named OGL-2007-BLG-349 and is located 8,000 light years from Earth, near the center of the Milky Way. First spotted in 2007, astronomers initially identified the system as a planet orbiting only one star, although data did suggest that there was another object in the background.

To read more, click here.