Astronomers Find Smaller Extrasolar Planets 25
SABME writes "NASA has announced the discovery of a new class of extra-solar planets. Here's a link to the NASA news release. These planets are only 10-15 times bigger than Earth; how far off are we from discovering Earth-sized planets orbiting other stars? Future NASA missions aimed at broadening these discoveries include Kepler, the Space Interferometry Mission and the Terrestrial Planet Finder. More info available at NASA's Extrasolar Planets webiste.
"
Anyone else laughed at the art? (Score:4, Interesting)
All they detected is that it looks like the suns in question have something spinning around them. When they actually photograph them or detect the planets themselves THEN and only then can we start to speculate what they look like. For now it is pure speculation that they are in fact planets.
Re:Anyone else laughed at the art? (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure it's just the Death Star
Re:Anyone else laughed at the art? (Score:1)
Take the example of the structure of benzene or that of DNA: both were predicted at some point and proven later on. If having an artistic impression allows us to test & validate our hypotheses when we have the means, then I see that as a 'Good Thing.'
Re:Anyone else laughed at the art? (Score:2)
Well, really heavy asteroids several times the mass of Earth are called planets.
Re:Anyone else laughed at the art? (Score:2)
**All they detected is that it looks like the suns in question have something spinning around them.** well if they can detect that they can say they're planets or planetlike somethings. and why would we need to speculate only after they got a good clean pic of the thing? what point would it be _speculating_ about something you know?
Re:Anyone else laughed at the art? (Score:1)
That's pretty close to that concept art IMO
Re:Class M? (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, yes. The star that is. What is remarkable is that one of these neptune-mass planets orbits a Class M star, the smallest and faintest in the standard stellar classes OBAFGKM. It is only the 2nd M star to harbor planets, even though hundreds have been studied.
Re:Class M? (Score:1)
Re:Class M? (Score:2)
Tsk. From the description of Vulcan linked from that page:
Doesn't sound like "abundance of surface water" to meI just read about this on the NYT... (Score:4, Interesting)
The NYT article doesn't say the planets are smaller than neptune or jupiter, as the NASA article does, but neither article explains why these planets are signs of Earthlike planets. Can someone fill me in?
Re:I just read about this on the NYT... (Score:5, Informative)
I think they're just pleased that they've found a couple of sub-Saturn sized planets. i.e. planets at least as big as Jupiter were first and easiest to be found, then came Saturns, and now, as they hoped, the trend has continued to Neptunes, buoying their aspirations to find even smaller planets.
Re:I just read about this on the NYT... (Score:1)
It will be a long time . . . (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It will be a long time . . . (Score:2)
Cheers,
Dr Fish
Somebody's confused (Score:2)
On such a planet, albeit one not so close to its
Re:Somebody's confused (Score:2)
Re:Somebody's confused (Score:2)
I found another report indicating that, as suspected, they really were talking about mass. Neptune is not, in fact, over 136,000 miles in diameter. (Neither is Jupiter.)
The strength of gravity doesn't grow as the cube of the radius. It grows linearly with the mass, and as the inverse square of the radius. ("Inverse-square law", remember?) The radius grows as the cube root of mass, given constant density. That means that, assuming earth's density, the gravitational force a
why does size matter? (Score:2)
Why do we assume that life is most likely where gravity is close to ours?
Consider the organisms discovered only in the last 30 years,
which thrive in environmental extremes of heat and pressure.
And it need not be non-"intelligent" life:
consider the pressures sustained by sperm whales and giant squid.
For that matter, is it guaranteed that large diameter = crushing gravity?
Might there realistically be a planetary giant with significantly lower density?
O
Re:why does size matter? (Score:3, Insightful)
a) much hotter than Earth (which is the case with these ones, I think)
or
b) mostly made of hydrogen and helium, like Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune
At our temperatues, a massive planet would captuse lots of hydrogen and helium from the initial nebula and never lose them.
In either case, no life remotely like us could exist. Of course one cannot rule out life based on some exotic chemistry, but the absence of evident life on Mercury or any of our