Posted on 03/23/2015 12:44:17 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Life on Earth exists becuase of the sun and our distance from it. Without that star and the energy it gives off, wed be what NASA once described as a lifeless ball of ice-coated rock. Luckily, we are far enough from it, and as of right now, its not radiating so much light as to make our planet uninhabitable. In some ways, were in the sweet spot, and researchers may have discovered many more such connections.
Stars in the Milky Way may have 100 billion planets two, on average, per star in their habitable zone, the area far enough from the star to avoid the planet getting scorched but close enough for it to potentially hold liquid water, according to new research from the Australian National University and the Niels Bohr Institute in Denmark.
That number, 100 billion, may seem beyond comprehension, but this result is actually not controversial, Steffen Jacobsen, a PhD student in Astrophysics and Planetary Science at Niels Bohr, told weather.com. Previous studies, he said, have predicted tens of billions of these planets. In that sense, what we find is not surprising. Practically every researcher in the field expects there to be many, many planets in the habitable zone and many, many Earth-like planets.
The potential for liquid water means the potential for life beyond Earth assuming, that is, that water is as important to the evolution of life there as it was on our planet. If you have liquid water, then you should have better conditions for life, we think, Jacobsen said. Of course, we dont know this yet. We cant say for certain. Solving that mystery is part of the thrill for researchers looking for extraterrestrial life.
In this case, Jacobsen and colleagues used a theory called the Titius-Bode law for their calculations. They looked at 151 of the nearly 400 planetary systems NASAs Kepler mission has collected data on, omitting systems with just two planets and focusing on those with four, five or even 10. Put simply, Titius-Bode says that within a single planetary system, a pattern exists in the distance between planets. In other words, if you know where the four planets lie [in a five-planet system], then you can calculate where the fifth one will lie, Jacobsen explained.
This is important because right now these planets are purely theoretical, and within the 151 systems, just 77 planets made the researchers short list for possibility of actual discovery.
Now its up to the field at large to comb through scores of data to determine whether Kepler actually has already spotted some of these planets and we just didnt know it. Some of these planets are so small the Kepler team will probably have missed them in the first attempt because the signals we get are so weak. They may be hidden in the noise, he said. You may miss them unless you know where to look and unless you know what to look for.
That, in a nutshell, is the crux of this work. Our research indicates that there are a lot of planets in the habitable zone and we know there are a lot of stars like the one were looking at. We know that means were going to have many billions of planets in the habitable zone, according to Jacobsen. If thats true, that would be very good news for the search for life.
The research, Using the inclinations of Kepler systems to prioritize new TitiusBode-based exoplanet predictions, was published Wednesday, Mar. 18, 2015 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
It could easily be that most of the habitable planets in the universe are in the neighborhood of dwarf stars and in fact inside the plasma sheath/heliosphere of such stars and, thus, in fact totally undetectable from the outside. Habitable zone would be a meaningless concept for such a situation.
And none of it is my fault.
I suspect either there are no or too few planets with intelligent life to have made contact with us, or they have deemed humans as too stupid and worthless to make contact with.
If there was even ONE other planet with intelligent life, one would have expected that civilization to have eventually expanded outwards to other systems...
Yep. There are several several other factors besides distance from a star.
That number is nothing. Compare it to the $17 trillion debt that the U.S. has!
Wowa! Dat's alotta planets!
Mars had plenty of water yet it is a sterile wasteland.
I predict many with life
I further predict few or none with life over the single cell stage.
When I get to heaven .... I’ll ask God
There are many many other galaxies, and according to some, there are other “universes” of galaxies—different space-times that are inaccessible from the one we live in. Some say there are a infinite number of such space-times. That is a lot of planets in deed.
If heaven is as described, you will just know the answers.
Wish I still had your belief set.
Or not.
They need to send people to Mars to search deep in area where water was present. The rovers just scratch the surface.
Best places to find life in the solar system are Europa or Enceladus
On the one hand, yeah. On the other hand the narration is almost arguing against itself, because the scope it describes seems philosophically and religiously nihilistic.
“Look on these works, ye mighty, and despair.”
Hey look, it snowed! ( Here in Chitown. )
For the ones outside the Goldilocks zone women, children, and minorities are hurt the most.
I bet it is more like 103.5 billion.
That's just one of around 50 very finely tuned variables necessary to make a planet "habitable" like earth. The probabililtiy of even 10 of these variables being present on any given planet is astronomical.
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