Post: Earth 2.0. New Inhabitable planet?
12-07-2011, 12:28 PM #1
xinfectedsoulx
Daddy's home.
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Artists Impression of Kepler 22-b


Originally posted by another user
A new planet detected orbiting a star 600 light years away could be INHABITED, scientists have revealed.

Kepler-22b - dubbed Earth 2.0 - may have continents, oceans and a surface temperature of around 22C - like a warm spring day in the UK.

It is the first so-called "super-Earth" known to lie within the "habitable" zone of a Sun-like star.

Dubbed the "Goldilocks zone", this is the orbital band where temperatures are just right to allow the existence of surface liquid water and, therefore, life itself.

"This discovery supports the growing belief that we live in a universe crowded with life," said Dr Alan Boss, from the Carnegie Institution in Washington DC, who helped identify the planet from data obtained by the Kepler space telescope.

The telescope, launched by the American space agency Nasa, is watching 155,000 stars looking for tiny dimmings in brightness that betray the presence of planets.

Kepler-22b's host star, in the region of the constellations of Lyra and Cygnus, is slightly smaller than the Sun and about 25% less luminous.

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The planet orbits the star in 290 days, compared with the Earth's 365, at a distance 15% closer than the Earth is from the Sun.

It lies right in the centre of the star's habitable zone, where potentially perfect conditions exist for life.

Two other small planets orbiting stars smaller and cooler than the Sun have recently been found at the very edges of their habitable zones. Their orbits more closely resemble those of Mars and Venus.

A report on the discovery will be published by the Astrophysical Journal.

Dr Douglas Hudgins, Kepler programme scientist at Nasa headquarters in Washington, said: "This is a major milestone on the road to finding Earth's twin."

The planet was spotted after making a "transit" across the front of its parent star, causing the star's brightness to dip. At least three transits are needed before such a signal can be confirmed as a planet.




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Click the sauce for a video from NASA.

So this planet is 600 light year away. Not far, but not close either. It would take around 22 million years to reach it on a spacecraft we have available right now. One this to bear in mind though is that we are looking at this planet from 600 year ago. Could be a lot has changed, could be nothing has changed. Could one day humans be able to reach this planet when new spacecraft that would go faster than the speed of light (yeah, I know, sounds un-realistic, but so did an aeroplane 200 years ago, and so did spacecrafts 100 years ago).

Thoughts?
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12-07-2011, 12:38 PM #2
Pixie Lott
Keep it MeLLo
I bet there world is like ours and they have said the same thing about us :p

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Justin
12-07-2011, 02:09 PM #3
Default Avatar
Gizmo
Guest
600 Light years away.... even if there is life on it, we're never going to find out with our methods of travelling space :p
12-07-2011, 02:33 PM #4
Yanni
Desmond
Pretty interesting, never know what will happen or what new technology they bring out.
12-07-2011, 02:54 PM #5
Alt
Banned
Right, when can i move ?:carling:
12-07-2011, 06:10 PM #6
Read about it it yesterday. Pretty awesome. When is the shuttle starting? Awesome face

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