Posted on 01/23/2018 2:23:29 PM PST by Red Badger
The Trappist system whew I assume vows of silence are required. Only inhabited by Mafia Dons .... Oh wait the Clintons just bought a place there!
If only they would leave the planet!
Now we just have to figure out exactly how to travel a trip of 39.6 light-years years to get there - if it’s even still there.
When we look up the Big Dipper we are seeing it as it was in the very distant past. I believe it looks more like a worm than a dipper now, if memory serves.
40 light years. So near but yet so far.
Planets b through h.
Did Darks do something to planet a?
The star is ‘A’.................
Well if it’s 39.6 light years, then it is more likely than not that it is still all there.
The good news is that they have great beer.
The bad news is that they’re probably tidally locked, which means the temperature variations are probably extreme, and you’ll never establish a sleep pattern.
The consolation news is that we don’t need to find habitable planets. For much lower levels of technology globally, the Earth could support a nice, SUBURBAN lifestyle for about 400 billion people (and still leave half for wilderness and parkland). And we can build orbiting Earth-like habitats for about a billion times more.
The only conceivable reason to populate other stars would be simply for their matter; eventually we’ll run out of planets to consume as we build our Dyson sphere.
Does the new planet system accept Uber?
It was infested already.
“The only conceivable reason to populate other stars would be simply for their matter; eventually well run out of planets to consume as we build our Dyson sphere.”
Or use other star systems for military defense from hostile extraterrestrials.
You are full of bull.
How can you tell that foreign planet has good beer
if you have not yet tested their fermentation process and the type of hops they are using?
I am not saying its aliens, but ...
“Well if its 39.6 light years, then it is more likely than not that it is still all there.”
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Could be, but you’d never know until you got there. And, of course, that’s an even bigger problem - the getting there.
So no one will ever know if it can support any form of life or if it ever has. Humankind will be quite lucky if it manages to put a colony within our own solar system.
Observations with the Kepler K2 extension for a total of 79 days revealed starspots and infrequent weak optical flares at a rate of 0.38 per day (30-fold less frequent than for active M6M9 dwarfs); a single strong flare appeared near the end of the observation period. The observed flaring activity possibly changes the atmospheres of the orbiting planets on a regular basis, making them less suitable for life. The star has a rotational period of 3.3 days.
Owing to its low luminosity, the star has the ability to live for up to 12 trillion years.
******
Oh well. There’s probably no life there, but maybe it would make a good home for future humans. Twelve trillion years is a long time.
Charles H. Duell was the Commissioner of US patent office in 1899. Mr. Deull’s most famous attributed utterance is that “everything that can be invented has been invented.”
Comte de Bufon: “Of one thing I am certain, we will never know what the stars are made of.”
You: So no one will ever know if it can support any form of life or if it ever has.
We’re talking about Trappist worlds... if you don’t know that means good beer, you don’t know beer. You do know beer, don’t you?
Oh, good point!
Two words: FLARE STAR. No, the system is not habitable. And by the way, we’ll never know if it is or not.
I have some bad news. A 150 pound man, who is has average hygiene, is carrying about five pounds of bacteria. The reason we can live with so much alien life in us, is we evolved to do so. If we ever set foot on a planet with life we haven’t evolved to defend against, or live with, the life there will literally eat us alive. The first time you have sex with a green alien woman will be your last.
“You: So no one will ever know if it can support any form of life or if it ever has.”
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I’m certainly up for hearing how you plan to travel 39.6 light years to TRAPPIST-1. (Now, there you’d have something most assuredly in need of patent protection.)
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