Dave and Snowy - you may have seen it already, but I knew you both would be interested.
It inspired today's Google animation thingy they have each day.
Quote
NASA Telescope Reveals Largest Batch of Earth-Size, Habitable-Zone Planets Around Single Star.
NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has revealed the first known system of seven Earth-size planets around a single star. Three of these planets are firmly located in the habitable zone, the area around the parent star where a rocky planet is most likely to have liquid water.
https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-telescope-reveals-largest-batch-of-earth-size-habitable-zone-planets-around
BRILLIANT!!! Great find, Freddy! I've been hip-deep in baby dragons with my schoolwork, so I haven't been able to do much searching for things of this nature. I'm chuffed that you brought it to my attention. Thanks.
Welcome :)
Baby dragons ? Hmm, that sounds intriguing.
It's an expression that I picked up somewhere that I've been using to indicate being very busy. I rather like it, actually. :)
Ahh, not heard of it - I thought it was a graphics project.
How much more of the course is left, you've been at it a while now ?
I've not quite reached the quarter-way mark yet. Still a while to go.
Is it a two year course ? I didn't realise it was a longun.
It is, but it will likely take me 3 years to complete, because I'm not taking "full time" semesters.
Good luck with the baby dragons, Dave.
Not heard about this star, only 40 LY away and 3 planets in the habitable zone. I this our star has that (Neptune,Venus , Earth, Mars) so a good chance one can support life.
Now, where did I put those plans for a warp drive...
Quote from: Snowcrash on February 24, 2017, 17:37:26 PM
Good luck with the baby dragons, Dave.
Not heard about this star, only 40 LY away and 3 planets in the habitable zone. I this our star has that (Neptune, Earth, Mars) so a good chance one can support life.
Now, where did I put those plans for a warp drive...
Um... Snowy? Shouldn't that be
Venus, Earth and Mars? If Neptune were in the habitable zone, either we'd be a moon of that planet (if Neptune were where Venus is) due to long term gravitational forces, or Jupiter would
also be in the habitable zone, giving us 5 planets in there. And that would make for a HUGE habitable zone. Just sayin' :P
I think I am in the mood to question the science. Just some friendly skepticism intended for a polite discussion. How do we know a "habitable zone", or anything for that matter, from well over two hundred trillion of miles away?
Dave, my bad. Venus is what I meant. Have changed it.
8pla, the colour of the star gives its temperature. The orbital periods for the planets are known, this gives their distance from the star. The habitable zone (or Goldilocks zone) is where water is likely to be liquid. Too close and there would be no water, too far and it would be frozen.
Venus is in our sun's habitable zone but due to having an atmosphere of mainly carbon dioxide, there is no chance of liquid water. This is only partly to do with how close it is. There are many other factors.
Earth, as we all know, is not too hot and not too cold. But the sun being a bit hotter and our atmosphere having way more carbon dioxide; would make life more of a challenge.
Mars is too small to keep up a good magnetosphere so the sun has stripped it of it's atmosphere (about 7mBar compared to our 1000mBar). In its early days it may well have had a life supporting atmosphere.
Knowing anything about the atmospheres of exoplanets is beyond our tech, for now. If we can detect oxygen in an exoplanet's atmosphere, this would be a good indicator that like exists on that planet. But you'll never know unless you visit or communicate with intelligent life. 4 light years is doable with generation ships but 40 light years is too far but now we're venturing into SciFi.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeqbD17ESH4