Newly discovered planet may be most Earth-like ever

Conspirator
User avatar
Posts: 3601
Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 5:01 pm

You might like:

PostThu Sep 30, 2010 10:19 am » by Zegtelzegtel


Image


Newly discovered planet may be most Earth-like ever, astronomer says

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- A decadelong hunt by an astronomer at the University of California, Santa Cruz has yielded the discovery of a planet that could be the most Earth-like planet ever discovered -- and the best case yet for a habitable one, ending our cosmic loneliness.

The planet, called Gliese 581g, is located in prime real estate within the constellation Libra, where it's sweater weather, not too windy, with scenic views of a white sky.

"It could be the Goldilocks planet, neither too hot nor too cold … orbiting its star in a 'habitable zone,' " said Steven Vogt of UC Santa Cruz, who announced the news with Carnegie Institution colleague Paul Butler at a Wednesday news briefing at the Washington, D.C., headquarters of the National Science Foundation, which funded the work.

"It may well be like Earth, where you could walk around comfortably and look out at the stars," said Vogt, 60, of Aptos.

Scientists say there is no evidence that Gliese 581g holds oxygenated landscapes of green and blue that would support microbes, dinosaurs or some alien-looking pre-human. For life, there must be water, and there's no proof of that. Yet.

But Earth is unlikely to be some stupendous fluke that happened just once, said Vogt.

"Places like Earth may not be very special," he said.

The findings result from 11 years of observations at the W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, where old-fashioned telescopes and advanced math are leading the exoplanet search.

Five times a year, Vogt flew from San Francisco to the Hawaiian city of Kona, then drove an hour to a tiny hotel in the northern town of Waimea, where he joined a number of other astronomers. The team slept all morning, then rose at midafternoon to start work. They didn't stop working until dawn, when it was time for breakfast.

The team used a technique known as the "wiggle" method, which detected planets by a slight gravitational tug they gave their star. They also made precise brightness measurements, verifying that the wobble was caused by the planet and not by a process within the star itself.

The team's new findings were reported in a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal,

"This is the first one I'm truly excited about," Penn State University astrobiologist Jim Kasting said. Not involved in the research, Kasting, a world leader in planetary habitability who works closely with NASA, speculated to The Associated Press that the planet is a "pretty prime candidate" for harboring life.

This is only the ninth of 116 star systems to be explored. There are many more -- astronomers estimate the universe contains about 1 septillion stars (a one with 24 zeros), a portion of which hold their own system of planets. The Milky Way alone is believed to have 100 billion to 200 billion stars.

So billions, perhaps trillions, of planets could be out in space, waiting to be discovered. Many of them are likely to circle in a habitable range, Vogt said.

Until now, only planets with tighter, faster and hotter orbits have been found.

The new planet is different. (Rather than use its scientific name, Vogt calls it Zarmina, in honor of his Kabul-born wife, an English instructor at Cabrillo College. "It's a beautiful planet … and I'm a lucky guy," he said.)

It is virtually our next-door neighbor, in cosmic terms. It circles a dim red star called Gliese 581 that's only 20 light-years away.

But don't cash in your frequent flier miles yet -- at the current speed of space travel, it would take tens of thousands of years to get there.

Wind gusts don't seem to exceed 40 miles per hour. While breezy, it's tolerable.
Image
I hope that this site is not infiltrated by dis info agents, but one can not be sure that it isn't, if no one here can prove otherwise. Lisakitty
Nulklear War...In Just Weeks. eeeeeee

Conspirator
User avatar
Posts: 2768
Joined: Thu Dec 03, 2009 1:56 am

PostThu Sep 30, 2010 10:33 am » by Tertiusgaudens


20 light years....

voyager is only a light day away...
Hope is the thing with feathers...
Emily Dickinson

  • Related topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

We are listed at the www.topparanormalsites.com website. Click here to vote for us.. Thank you :-)