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Space Science

Scientist Picks a Gem of a Star 48

UrgleHoth writes "According to a CNN report, the star Gem 37 is the most likely candidate for alien life. Astrobiologist Maggie Turnbull of the University of Arizona in Tuscon has taken a list of most likely habitable planets and stars. Gem 37 topped the list. The deciding factor? 'Gem 37, the 37th brightest star in the constellation of Gemini, came out on top because it looks most like our sun.' This work was done for NASA's Terrestrial Planet Finder."
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Scientist Picks a Gem of a Star

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  • by seanmeister ( 156224 ) on Thursday October 09, 2003 @02:57PM (#7175443)
    Astrobiologist Maggie Turnbull of the University of Arizona in Tuscon has taken a list of football teams most likely to win the next Super Bowl. The Carolina Panthers topped the list. The deciding factor? 'The Panthers, one of the newest teams in the NFL, came out on top because I like the kitty cat on their helmets.'
  • And what kind of alien lifeforms will we find there? Gemtians?
  • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) on Thursday October 09, 2003 @03:39PM (#7175995) Homepage Journal
    "This stable, middle-aged star is just a bit hotter and brighter than our sun. And if alien life is anywhere, it's likely to be there," New Scientist magazine said on Wednesday.

    It's important to have a suitable star, but that's only one term of the Drake Equation [seti-inst.edu].

    A less sensational quote might have been, "And if alien life is anywhere, it's possible that it's there."
    • The Drake Equation is for intellegent technologicaly advanced life. The earth of 100 years ago would not be a hit for the Drake Equation.
      Of course life with at least radio is the most interesting for us to find. :) I want to see the alien version of I love Lucy. Dziggrabits I am home... Goolock I want to be in the showwwww.....
  • I'll bet they have two heads.

    They probably look a lot like this guy [bbc.co.uk].

  • ROAD TRIP!!!!!!!!!

  • Whatever happened to that list of candidates that SETI@HOME found? Have those been thoroughly investigated yet? If not, when are they planning to do so? I remember hearing that they were going to have a look at them, but I don't recall when that was going to be.
  • do they insist in thinking that life developed elsewhere must be anything like earth's life?
    • "And if alien life is anywhere, it's likely to be there"



      says the article. It's not that alien life *must* be like earth's life, but alien life like earth's like will likely be on a star like earth's star. And since we don't know anything about how alien like unlike earth's is like, we don't know what kind of star to look for.

    • Because if you open the criteria up too much, you end up having no clue what to look for and whether you've found it when you see it. We know how things work on Earth, so that's where we begin. Note that it isn't the *end* of the search, but just the start.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by barawn ( 25691 ) on Thursday October 09, 2003 @07:31PM (#7178494) Homepage
      Oxygen in the atmosphere.

      Any significant amount of oxygen is almost certainly from something like photosynthesis. Oxygen's too reactive to stay in the atmosphere for any significant amount of time without something constantly generating it, and that's likely to be life.

      Now, before everyone jumps down my throat saying "You don't need oxygen for life! Oxygen is poison! It's extremely dangerous!" - they'd be right, and wrong (as many people are...). Oxygen IS very reactive and corrosive - but that's why life wants it around. Oxygen generates a lot of chemical activity and a lot of chemical potential, allowing for complicated reactions to happen. This isn't "Earth-centric", it's basic chemistry.

      And yes, even life in the ocean would likely generate oxygen in the atmosphere, and yes, it is possible to have life in the ocean WITHOUT oxygen in the atmosphere, but unless there's no solar insolation there at all, organisms that use sunlight will beat out those that don't virtually everywhere, and photosynthesis works best with oxygen involved in the process (to generate the many, many different oxidation potentials needed).
      • Very well put.
        However (and this is trivia, not a correction), I'm betting that they'll look not for molecular oxygen (O2), but ozone (O3). The latter has a much better spectroscopic signature since the former is a homonuclear diatomic (2 atoms of the same species) and therefore doesn't absorb a lot of light. And ozone is almost certainly around if any significant amount of molecular oxygen is present.
  • 37 Gem star images (Score:3, Informative)

    by chongo ( 113839 ) on Thursday October 09, 2003 @05:34PM (#7177156) Homepage Journal
    My 37 Gemini [isthe.com] page contains several images from the POSS2/UKSTU and the HST Phase 2 digital plate stacks.
  • This is NOT a worthy submission. IMHO, it's not even interesting science!. How about giving us mod points to the submission area and to the stories given a place on the home page? Users could mod up submissions to the point they make the home page and, more importantly, mod down stories OFF the home page. (Heck, even msnbc.com lets users rate the articles.)

    Cragen.

  • I can't seem to find the distance between here and Gem 37 in any of the mentioned links.

    Is it tens of light years, hundreds of light years, thousands, even?

    Even if there were indeed some intelligent life in the Gem 37 system, only in the first case (tens of light years) could we hope to ever communicate with them. Unless if Einstein's theory somehow turns out to be wrong (or not entirely correct) and both mankind and the folks at Gem 37 eventually develop some sort of FTL communication and/or propulsion t
    • Even if there were indeed some intelligent life in the Gem 37 system, only in the first case (tens of light years) could we hope to ever communicate with them.

      The goal of TPF is somewhat broader than SETI, which will only find life that is intelligent (i.e. capable and willing to send beamed radio transmissions to other stars). TPF will hunt for signs of ANY biological activity by looking for certain chemical signatures (e.g., an oxygen atmosphere).

      The exciting thing about TPF is that it skips severa

    • According to Simbad [u-strasbg.fr], 37 Gem has a parallax of about 50 milliarcseconds; this data is from the Hipparcos satellite. In other words, it's about 17 parsecs (56 light years) away.

      No doubt, the inhabitants of 37 Gem are listening with interest to our broadcast stations from 1947. Perhaps they consider World War II a big "reality TV" show.

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