Water Found in Exoplanet's Atmosphere 185
anthemaniac writes "Astronomers have long suspected that water should exist in the atmospheres of extrasolar planets. Now they have evidence. Water has been discovered in a planet called HD209458b, which was previously found to have oxygen. From the article: 'The discovery ... means one of the most crucial elements for life as we know it can exist around planets orbiting other stars.' But don't go looking for little green men. You might remember HD209458b as a 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star."
Straw poll: (Score:4, Interesting)
How many people now think that ETs of some form do exist?
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It's a big universe. Chances are very good that other life of some sort exists. However, we have found no evidence of life yet, despite the presence of oxygen which would usually be considered a strong indicator of the presence of life.
"Despite the oxygen, the faraway pla [space.com]
Re:Straw poll: (Score:5, Insightful)
Another thing is, we often make the following assumptions in terms of life forms, and we can be ceratain of none of them:
1) requirements of Carbon and Oxygen
-- Sulphur, Silicon, and any far-left or far-right non-noble element can handle the requirements here (namely something that can form long complex structures, and something highly reactive that nonetheless has stable compounds wherein it exists)
2) The life will be based on nucleic acids (RNA/DNA) and amino acids (proteins)
-- While these are more simple structures that could perform their tasks while remaining stable, there are other structures that could potentially store data and perform structural/chemical tasks.
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Scientists aren't looking for intelligent life, they're just looking for life. Discovering an amoeba on a different planet would be a major find.
Re:"Yes" to Colonisation (Score:2)
Humans have managed to co-exist with each other for hundreds of thousands of years without any real problems so it's perfectly likely we could achieve the same harmony with other intelligent sp
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I also thought of (Bova?) With Saturn Rukh.
Re:Straw poll: (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree with you that there could well be life that is vastly different than what we are used to.
But this doesn't make sense to me. When you say far-left and far-right, I assume you mean the periodic table. That means you are talking about Cl, Br, Na, K, etc. That doesn't make sense (they tend to only make 1 bond), so I figure you are talking about the p-block.
That means you are talking about B, F, C, Si, Cl and Br. What is special about carbon is that it forms 4 bonds. So, this means you are just talking about carbon and silicon. Let's throw out anything heavier (Ge, Sn) because they aren't that abundant.
Sure, there could be something based on silicon but... Look at CO2 (a gas) and SiO2 (silica, a solid). Carbon just seems like the best candidate for life to be based on. Nitrogen (or P) and boron (or Al) seem to be the best other candidates.
Re:Straw poll: (Score:5, Interesting)
That's a misconception; the sort of silicon-based life that we're talking about are not precisely the same as carbon chains. In carbon chains, you typically have C-C-C-C-C... etc. In the equivalent silicon (actually silicone) molecule, you have Si-O-Si-O-Si-O-Si.... etc. Si-Si-Si... etc doesn't chain well, but Si-O-Si-O.. chains indefinitely. Compare a hydrocarbon-based lubricant with a silicone-based one, hydrocarbon solids (plastics) with silicone ones, etc. There's been a lot more research on the former so far; the latter can likewise be functionalized.
A few differences in the chemistry:
1) C-C-C-C-C... chains can freely rotate, while Si-O-Si-O... chains need a specific "joint" to do so.
2) Carbon more readily double and triple bonds, although removing Os from the Si-O chain can create similar (but not equivalent) effects.
There are all sorts of biologically interesting silicon compounds. The silicon equivalent of methane is silane. It's even more flammable than methane; it's hypergolic with our atmosphere (burns on contact). Its giving up of its hydrogen could be seen as equivalent to ATP and its phosphorus. Longer "silanes" scale like longer hydrocarbons -- their vapor pressure decreases the longer they get (silanes with 2-3 silicons make for good wood sealants). Zeolites are silicates (your typical silicon solids that you were picturing) but with various metal ions interspersed with them; they're excellent, highly selective catalysts. Probably the most biologically interesting (to me, at least) are silanols [ic.ac.uk], which exist naturally in Earth's oceans (and probably predated life), and can form all sorts of catalytic groups, membranes, etc.
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Hydrogen, helium, oxygen, carbon, neon, iron, nitrogen, silicon, magnesium, sulfur. There's your top ten, in that order. It's interesting that carbon, versatile as it is, is so very common. Considering that hydrogen and oxygen, hence water, rank even higher, I think that life as we know it has statistically higher odds of appearing, especially in conditions where water is liquid. The physics of these compounds i
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From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon#Silicon-based _life [wikipedia.org]:
Also, the article points out that long complex ch
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Re:Straw poll: (Score:4, Interesting)
Your Hitler comparison is flawed. Hitler was only one person, and most vegetarians are nothing like Hitler. However, a majority of Christians (at least in the USA; my apologies if you live somewhere else where Christians are not fundamentalist) do believe the earth is 6000 years old, that evolution is false, that Creationism should be taught in public schools, etc. So if you're one of the rare minority that doesn't believe this way, and doesn't try to push these beliefs on everyone else, then that's great. But you have to acknowledge that most of your co-believers are like this this.
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Re:Straw poll: (Score:4, Informative)
CBS poll [cbsnews.com]
Before you say anything about the validity of polls, I think they're a lot more valid than some comments from random people like you on Slashdot who are trying to defend a position with no evidence whatsoever.
Anyway, the poll referenced shows 55% believing that "God created humans in present form", meaning they're Creationists. More importantly, 37% favor teaching Creationism instead of Evolution in schools, and 65% favor teaching both.
So your assertion that most Christians in the USA ("WHEREVER" is a totally different ball of wax; other places don't have nearly as many fundamentalists as the USA) "DONT WANT" creationism taught in school is obviously false. The percentage of Christians in the USA is certainly significantly less than 100%, with all the atheists, agnostics, Muslims, Jews, Hindus, and others. Let's say it's around 75% for argument's sake; if 65% out of 75% believes both Creationism and Evolution should be taught, that's obviously a majority. And the 37% of the stricter Creationism-only group is still about half. Again, look at the significance here: HALF of US Christians want Creationism (only) taught in schools.
So no, my opinions are not based on any personal anecdotes, but instead large nationwide surveys.
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And 2% are a bit confused.
Cheers
Stor
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On what basis are you saying this? It doesn't simply follow from the universe being big if the chances of life appearing at any given location is small enough. How do you know that this isn't the case?
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Certainly no one knows the exact odds of life beginning, but we know it happened at least once. We know that the structure of our universe seems to favor the development of autocatalytic systems, feedb
Re:Straw poll: (Score:5, Interesting)
Which tells us nothing except that it is possible for life to exist. The fact that life exists here tells us absolutely nothing about the likelihood of life arising apart from its being greater than zero because for obvious reasons we are sampling from a biased distribution, being alive ourselves. :-)
> Do you have any idea how many billions of stars are in our galaxy, and how many billions of galaxies are in the observable universe?
As it happens, yes. But I also know that combinatorial explosions [wikipedia.org] can generate numbers vastly larger than the number of things in the physical universe and the number of ways of arranging matter is described by a combinatorial explosion. Who knows how many of those combinations involve life, but it has the potential to be incredibly small. Small in a way that the size of the universe doesn't touch in bigness.
> If you are saying, "no one knows for sure. Don't say you're sure the chances are good if you can't prove they are," then that is certainly valid.
Looks like we're actually in total agreement.
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I can't help but wonder how long it'll take till we have the same leap for detecting life once we know exactly what we're looking for. I'm hoping it'll be sooner rather than later.
Read this book: Rare Earth (Score:5, Interesting)
It is a very well-researched book that goes into great detail on all the different terms of the drake equation (and a few extra terms) and shows what the best scientific evidence suggests are the actual values for those terms. The bottom line of the book is that single-celled life is probably incredibly common, it's probably everywhere. Life that's big enough for you to actually see is probably pretty rare. Intelligent life is very rare, and technological civilizations are practically a miracle.
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civilizations can still be both miraculous and "common"
Wait. Isn't "common" usually defined in terms of a ratio? dictionary.com definition 4 says: widespread; general; ordinary
So by that definition, even if there are billions of civilizations, if the ratio is 1/10000000000000 then I don't think you can call it common.
Anyway, the grandparent post asked, "who believes in ET" and I think that a scientific answer: ET is out there, but maybe not even in our galaxy. So we are very very unlikely to ever find any life that we can talk to. The question that people
Perhaps (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Perhaps (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Perhaps (Score:5, Funny)
Vorlons? More like Vogons. You know, the fat [cdc.gov], bureaucratic [irs.gov] bullies [whitehouse.gov] who write horrible emo poetry [myspace.com] and eventually demolished the Earth in order to build a useless bypass [usnews.com].
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Could have its advantages [daughtersoftiresias.org].
Re:Read this book: Rare Earth (Score:5, Funny)
Kind of like on slashdot.
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Doesn't help (Score:2)
if they're so far outside our light-cone that we'll never come into contact with them.
Assuming we can hold our civilisation together, it's still going to take us a friggin' long time to explore a single galaxy that's 100,000 lightyears across, with 200-400 billion stars in it. Even if there are thousands of intelligent races in the Milky Way, it might still take us a million years to find even one.
And if we're alone in this galaxy, the nearest one is 2 million lightyears away. Who's going to volunteer to
Actually, it doesn't say much (Score:2)
For starters, heh... why is it any surprise that water exists? We already know that hydrogen is pretty much everywhere. (Just look at all those main sequence stars.)
And we already know that oxygen forms everywhere. Just look at the CNO cycle [wikipedia.org], again, pretty typical of main-sequence hydrogen-fusing stars. A percentage of it ends up staying oxygen -- or for that matter C, N or F, and occasionally all the way to iron and nickel -- so even a helium flash in a
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Yeah, that's the general idea here...
Umm... Would you care to fill me in on the news of the extrasolar planet where lifeforms have been discovered?
If you just mistyped and mean the Earth, well, 1 positive is a horrible survey, with basically an infinite margin of error... It could be one in 100, or one in 9999999999999999999999999
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Do your research... (Score:5, Funny)
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Man, you must have some serious lag times.
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Man, you must have some serious lag times.
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Criteria for Life (Score:5, Funny)
Where there is hot water, there are saunas. Where there are saunas, there are tourists. Thus this remote planet has life, and most likley drinks with little umbrellas (or "snotzwathctls" as the local dialect probably refers to them).
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Also, O2 is no sure biomarker. Europa has an abiotic O2 atmosphere, albeit extremely thin. A "water world" (earthlike planet with no solid surface, only a giant global sea) could do it: ionizing radiation from the star separates 2 H2O into 4H + 2O, which
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Because it would be easier to invade, should the need to destroy WMDs ever arise ;-)
Of course! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Of course! (Score:5, Funny)
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Boiling water? No problem! (Score:4, Insightful)
No little green men? (Score:4, Funny)
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Aaaaaahhhhhh...... (Score:5, Funny)
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HD209458a (Score:2)
"Hi, I'm Troy McClure..." (Score:5, Funny)
"You might remember me from such planets as HD209458b, the 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star, and from Earth, the deadliest planet of them all."
HOT JUPITERS !!! its back (Score:3, Funny)
ah hey. theres a new meme for you.
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Thank you.
Excuse me i just woke up (Score:2)
Life can easily exist (Score:4, Interesting)
They just need to evolve in that environment.
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Maximum temperature for microbial life at pressure is closer to 200 degrees F or 90C. Similar to Thermus aquaticus in yellowstone, an extremophile that lives above 70C.
Don't get too carried away! (Score:4, Informative)
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Sure it wouldn't be a slam dunk, but it'd be something that ought to be worth looking into.
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Personally, I lean toward that idea that life can only *originate* in a small window of 'specs' ( such as 70-100* F, in water, with plenty of amino acids floating around ),
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Recall the "programming error" in the survey ramrobots of Niven's Known Space: you only need those Earth-like conditions at one spot, not over the whole planet. Maybe there's the local equivalent of a Mt. Lookitthat [oinc.net].
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To turn your question around: what makes the 70-100F range so special that life has to originate there? Liquid water? Exists in plenty of different fashions at different temperatures. Stable chemistry? Same. All in all, the ven
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Sure, that membrane is a start, but does it really protect against radiation and heat that well? Or does it serve just as a container for DNA, keeping it from being all slutty and rec
Small observation (Score:2)
Sure, you can have some small evolutionary deviation in primitive organisms such as bacteria, allowing them to survive maybe a bit more (such as the extremophile vent-dwellers that live in 90C), but you'd need some fundamentally different data-storage-&-access machinery and molecular-assembly machinery to facilitate something that resembles life, if you want to stray further outside that range.
maybe you (or a creative bacterium) can come up with a very small icebox
But can life evolve (Score:2)
It turns out that evolution is easy, but genesis is hard. Remember, scientists have manag
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With everything we have that might survive there. Surely something might do so, and when we get enough tech we can send something that might make this sucker useful.
incomplete summary (Score:3, Interesting)
But don't go looking for little green men. You might remember HD209458b as a 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star."
but neglects to answer the very important question this raises :
Given what we remember about HD209458b, what colour little men should we look for?
My initial guess was red, but there's no guarantee HD209458b-ians can even get sunburned.
If old Sci-Fi has taught anything (Score:2)
Also, there entire culture can be overthrown by 1 starfleet captian.
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Water for life as *WE* know it. (Score:2, Insightful)
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Well, of course it's life as *we* know it. We don't know anything else, and trying to seriously imagine something which is of a completely different nature than your own is, at best, wild assed speculation.
Sure, you could posit a life form based on damned near anything -- but without any actual s
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Talk About... (Score:2)
Talk about Global Warming! Al Gore should go and investigate it immediately.
Where's your imagination? (Score:2)
But don't go looking for little green men. You might remember HD209458b as a 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star.
Why should that keep little green men from evolving? Read this. [uga.edu] It's an article about life on our own planet that lives in the boiling water around volcanic jets on the ocean floor.
There, you see? (Score:2)
You might remember HD209458b as a 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star
There, you see? Global warming is a problem everywhere these days!
Hot spandex babes from HD209458b (Score:2)
The water that gets stripped off (Score:2)
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No, really. Does that little bit of sophistry have to get trotted out every time a topic like this comes up?
Let's try something else...
"Just tell Hollywood that the planet is really hot, and celebrities will donate millions of dollars and have concerts to raise money for NASA to save the bears that may or may not live there, including a really nice concert somewhere in a nice town in the Great Plains, which um...
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You're missing the point! I know it's a troll. I'm campaigning for newer, better, more entertaining trolling. I mean, if someone has to troll, can't they at least update their shtick? I'm just trying to help, here.
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Subject: Ob.
Body: IFOWON HD209458 overlords.
This IA has the added benefit of sounding a bit like the phrase it's replacing.
Likewise, slashdot humor can get the IA treatment:
In Soviet Russia = ISR
Imagine a Beowulf cluster of = IABCO
But does it run Linux? = BDIRL?
and so on. Doing this would save precious bits, and would serve well as a in-joke for the Slashdot cognoscenti. Thus,
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And we thank you.