Most Earth-Like Alien Planet Possibly Found

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http://news.yahoo.com/most-earth-alien- ... 29737.html


LONG BEACH, Calif. — A possible alien planet discovered by NASA's Kepler space telescope is the most Earth-like world yet detected beyond our solar system, scientists say.

With a radius that is just 1.5 times that of Earth, the potential planet is what a so-called "super-Earth," meaning it is just slightly larger than the Earth. The candidate planet orbits a star similar to the sun at a distance that falls within the "habitable zone" — the region where liquid water could exist on the planet's surface. Scientists say the planet, if confirmed, could be a prime candidate to host alien life.

"This was very exciting because it's our fist habitable-zone super Earth around a sun-type star," astronomer Natalie Batalha, a Kepler co-investigator at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., said Tuesday (Jan. 8) here at the 221st meeting of the American Astronomical Society.

The find could be the closest so far to an Earth twin beyond the solar system, she said. The object's host star is a G-type star just slightly cooler than our own sun.

"It's orbiting a star that’s very much like our sun," Batalha added. "Previously the ones we saw were orbiting other types of stars."

The object takes 242 days to orbit its star (compared to Earth's 365 days) and is about three-quarters of the Earth-sun distance from its parent. The Earth orbits 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) from the sun on average, a distance known as 1 astronomical unit.

"It's a big deal," astrophysicist Mario Livio, of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, told SPACE.com. "It's definitely a good candidate for life."

Based on its characteristics, the possible planet may or may not be rocky, but it certainly has the possibility of liquid water.

"Maybe there's no land life, but perhaps very clever dolphins," Livio joked.

The possible planet is called KOI 172.02 (KOI stands for Kepler Object of Interest, a designation assigned to all planet candidates found by the telescope until they are confirmed as planets). The discovery was announced at the meeting Monday (Jan. 7) by Christopher Burke of the SETI Institute as part of a batch of 461 new planet candidates found by Kepler.

Kepler finds potential planets by looking for periodic dips in the brightness of stars caused by planets passing in front of them, blocking some of their light. Astronomers have multiple ways to confirm that these candidates are actual planets, such as looking for small variations in the timing of the planets' passes in front of stars caused by the gravitational tug of other planets in the system.

Kepler launched in 2009 and was recently granted an extended mission until at least 2016. The telescope has detected 2,740 candidate planets thus far. While just 105 of them have been confirmed to date, Kepler scientists estimate that more than 90 percent will end up being the real deal.

"There is no better way to kick off the start of the Kepler extended mission than to discover more possible outposts on the frontier of potentially life-bearing worlds," Burke said in a statement.
 

Ramhusker

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I wonder how soon we can start sending some people there? Very soon I hope.
 

Stranger

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Ramhusker said:
I wonder how soon we can start sending some people there? Very soon I hope.
Perhaps we can convince Congress, Obama and his staff to take the first 1-way flights.
 

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I would check it out if they'd send me.

Can't be any worse...
 

bluecoconuts

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Just read about that earlier today, pretty cool. I did a paper on another planet a last year that's very earth like and pretty close (compared to other systems). NASA is also working on a warp drive, so maybe we can have a breakthrough one day.
 

CGI_Ram

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Probably too far to travel to, by conventional space travel.

This type of news is always fascinating to me.

Sent from my GT-N7100 using Tapatalk 2
 

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brokeu91 said:
X said:
I would check it out if they'd send me.

Can't be any worse...
Would you be able to get the Rams games there?
I'd just have to place repeater satellites every 10,000 miles or so between there and here.

Might have to sell my car to pull that off, but I won't need it up there.
 

CGI_Ram

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Anyone remember this photo taken of Saturn's moon Titan by the Huygens probe on it's way to a surface landing in 2005?

There is speculation of oceans of liquid methane on that moon. It's just an unbelieveable image. Amazing to think the sun rises and sets on this little moon, and waves of liquid methane crashing on the surface.

titan-shoreline.jpg
 

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That's pretty awesome. It's mind-boggling to think of the MANY different planets out there in the MANY different galaxies that *could* have the ideal environment for life. OUR life, that is. As Stephen Hawking always says though, life doesn't have to exist in 70 degree weather with a sun heating up its environment. There could be a whole slew of different lifeforms out there. Some extremely simple, some entirely advanced.

I like science. :yeh:

LOVE the pictures from the Hubble too.

http://hubblesite.org/gallery/album/entire/