Astronomers Announce 5-Planet System 145
An anonymous reader writes "Astronomers have detected a record-breaking 5th planet orbiting the star 55 Cancri, 41 light years distant. This planet orbits within the 'habitable zone,' where water could presumably exist, but it's probably another gas giant like Saturn, so any liquid water would have to be on a moon. There's still a big gap between this planet and the outermost planet where no planets have been detected yet, so there could yet be a rocky planet in the system. The lead researcher said he's optimistic that 'continued observations will reveal a rocky planet within five years.'"
MORE cuts!?!? (Score:5, Funny)
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As a counterexample, what about an AI? An AI has basically no requirements as far as chemistry are concerned. While it's laughably implausible to imagine an electronic AI "evolving" out of nothingness the way biological organisms did it's still -- by my definition -- "life"
I find it hard to imagine how a person could NOT call that life. Why are you calling it "AI?" What's so artificial about an electronic life form which evolved on its own? I don't find the idea implausible at all, at least, no more imp
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Note though, that I didn't say it was impossible, o
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You make a valid point, to an extent.
... damned hard!! At that point, every object you look at in the
See, the reasons why scientists look for life as we know it is because we don't have the slightest clue as to how to look for life that is nothing like we know.
Looking for something you can conceive of is difficult enough on an astronomical scale. Looking for the inconceivable is
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Gee, thanks for linking to that interesting article I HAVE NO WAY OF READING.
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Haven't they, though? I'm no scientist (no, really) but doesn't their larger size have some kind of gravitational effect on other planets which helps keep them in proper orbit (or somesuch?)
Someone help me out here?
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Of course, all those jokes will finally be put to rest come 2620 when scientists agree to finally rename Uranus.
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..and the obligatory Futurama quote of the day:
Farnsworth: "Urectum."
Thanks for the setup!
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Jupiter, just as an example, (probably) has a "core" of rock. I think of this "core" as the planet itself, and everything outside of that core to be the atmosphere.
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More news (Score:5, Funny)
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What record? (Score:3, Funny)
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What Record? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:What Record? (Score:5, Insightful)
To a very, very close approximation, we're missing all the extrasolar planets. We've yet to discover a single one outside our own Galaxy :-)
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Extrasolar simply means beyond our solar system (Score:2, Insightful)
The Milky Way galaxy (ours) contains ~200 billion stars, each one a potential solar system.
Obligatory wikipedia article listing some of the discovered extrasolar planets: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrasolar_planet [wikipedia.org]
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So, the sentence would be: every year we detect planets farther and father from their sun, and we just reached the necessary time of finding planets in the habitable zone.
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Longer than 5, but it's only really in the last 5 years that lots have been discovered so the grandparent probably is fairly accurate...
From TFA:
more planets to come! (Score:5, Interesting)
by the sounds of it, the wobble on this thing is just a mess- probably a lot like what our solar system's wobble looks like from the outside.
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by the sounds of it, the wobble on this thing is just a mess- probably a lot like what our solar system's wobble looks like from the outside.
The problem, is that the wobble we measure is a lot more messy, as we have relatively poor signal/noise ratios. The wobble isn't even very messy when you look at it in the frequency domain (its spectra), as basically each planet orbiting it represents a single vertical line, provided that their orbit is not too eccentric.
There was this java program I tried to analyse
Re:more planets to come! (Score:4, Informative)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemic_(amateur_extrasolar_planet_search_project) [wikipedia.org]
http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/mar07/4933 [ieee.org]
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Yup. And actually they've had an update [oklo.org] related to today's release which is quite relevant.
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Probably worse than ours. The Solar System is dominated by two planets. An astronomer looking back at us from 55 Cancri with the same technology would detect Jupiter, and probably Saturn. If he's patient enough to watch for a couple of orbits, he might just spot Uranus and Neptune too.
The other planets wouldn't be detectable to our technology. They'd see a system w
Re:more planets to come! (Score:5, Interesting)
An astronomer from 55 Cancri would probably detect Jupiter (mass/distance^2 = 11.7 Earths/AU^2), Venus (1.56 Earths/AU^2), Saturn (1.04), Earth (1.00), and possibly Mercury (0.367), while Mars (0.046), Uranus (0.039), and Neptune (0.019) would almost certainly go unnoticed.
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Curb your enthusiasm (Score:5, Interesting)
Imagine they even found one that seemed to have artificial satellites.
After years of observing and improving our telescopes, imagine we managed to image the planet itself and saw a civilization much like our own.
Glorious times we live in huh?
Imagine after much observation we found lots of these civilized neighbors out there in the black.
Imagine we tried to send them signals and waited the many years for a reply.
What if none came?
After hundreds of years of knowing we were not alone we came to the inescapable realization that just communicating with other intelligent beings in our galaxy is so hard and takes so long that it may never be achieved.
Wormholes and warp drives and ark ships.. what if it is all an unattainable dream?
Thankfully, I like to dream.
Think positively (Score:5, Funny)
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But yeah, flying light years to another planet just to make war is rather impractical. Even with some sort of hyperdrive- do you want to risk any survivors of an attack, knowing such a device is possible, developing their own and striking back?
Don't count out ego, though- I wouldn't place aliens above empire-building for empire's
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There's no reason to assume that technological progress = social progress.
However, we can safely assume that time ~= technological progress.
Alien life forms would certainly be millions of years either more or less developed than us. Probably billions. How much has human warfare changed the last 1000 years? Even with several orders of magnitude error margins, we're talking "sufficiently advanced technology" here.
Alien warfare will not be fair. It will be like discovering an amazonas hunter-gatherer tribe, then deciding whether or not to attack them with gunships, infrared sensors
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Here's exactly the kind of comment I hate whenever we're talking about something dealing more or less with extraterrestrial life, it's how we go from very down-to-Earth claims such as "here's what we know about exoplanets" to "here's what we might find out a few years from now" to "teh extraterrians they wont care about us cause were so inferior omg!". I know extraterrestrial life is an exciting topic, but because they're so little to satisfy ourselves with people are so quick to wildly speculate that they
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We don't know, if we don't try. (Score:2)
If there is a way to travel to other stars though, it would be the greatest thing ever happened to mankind.
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It may be impossible to travel to other stars, but we don't know that for certain. We have to try, and then declare it impossible.
Oh God, did you even think before you pulled that one out? Of course we do not have to "try" to find out it's "impossible", we know damn well what we can or can't do and the thing is as of now we couldn't send a probe to another star in a timely manner, let alone astronauts. "Trying" would be like trying to simulate the folding of proteins with a DEC PDP-1. We just can't do tha
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My position is one of neutrality; I believe it's possible, but I need to be shown the money before definitely confirming it as true. But there's just so much us humans are limited to in terms of perspective that I caution from saying something is absolutely or even most likely not possible.
Ewoks live on a moon (Score:3, Funny)
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Endor is the name of both the moon the second death star was built over, and the name of its gas giant planet.
At least you're (almost) right about the wookies, except it's spelled Kashyyyk.
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Therefore you must acquit!
Make up your mind. (Score:2)
What is the gate address? (Score:2)
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Walking bird, standing dog, big eye, big eye, snake, archer, pyramid.
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Ugh. I feel dirty for being compelled to point this out.
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SETI, and contact them? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:SETI, and contact them? (Score:5, Insightful)
Downside, they're judging us all by William Shatner.
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Re:SETI, and contact them? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Umm... I guess you must have missed the 70s, because been there, done that [wikipedia.org].
Don't worry though, I'm sure we'll have space defenses built up some time in the next 50000 years. And if not, we really weren't going to get very far in the galaxy anyways.
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IT'S THE LAME-NESS FIL-TER! EX-TER-MI-NATE!
The lameness filter is thinning out the Dalek fleet! Wait...aren't Daleks more deadly when their numbers are lowered? They've adapted it to work for them!
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I'll see your what if, and raise you one:
What if 50 years from now we receive a tight-beam laser transmission inviting us to join the galactic survival club and, BTW, whatever you do, don't send out radio signals to random planets, the neighborhood has been littered with alarms by the berserker
An even bigger distance (Score:2)
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and the parent star is 41 light years away, is that like... next door? next town? next country?
Next town. ((41 light years) / (1 AU)) * 0.7 mm = 1.82 kilometers
You could have found out on your own I'm sure ;-)
Starting to sound like flying cars.. (Score:2)
However, at least we stand a good chance of being alive when the discovery is made. (Madly knocking wood)
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However, at least we stand a good chance of being alive when the discovery is made. (Madly knocking wood)
Whoa. Only a true uber-geek could masturbate to astronomy news.
- T
How far has our reach extended? (Score:2, Interesting)
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Television and radio signals are both part of the EM spectrum, all of which travel at C with varying levels of refraction depending on the medium it passes through.
That gives us a range of 71 light years for a civilization to have received the signal at all, and 35.5 light years if we would expect to hear a response from a civilization tomorrow.
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Shirley: you mean 49 years ago, as the book was published in 1985.
Re:How far has our reach extended? (Score:5, Informative)
When did we first build powerful transmitters? Comercial radio started in the 1920's so almost 90 years ago. Higher frequency VHF got beg after the war in the lat 40's when TV got popular.
Could they hear it? Only if they have invested in VERY sensitive receivers MUCH more sensitive then anything we have. Our current receivers could only hear a signal if it were from a very powerful beacon aimed right at us.
We do not currently have a system then could detect our own signals if they were coming from another star.
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Exactly. SETI wouldn't be able to detect Earth from 0.5 lightyears away. Broadcast transmissions are as good as undetectable over interstellar distances.
A perfect spot for a rebel base! (Score:2, Funny)
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5 planets? (Score:2)
Not to nitpick, but just so people don't go away thinking there are only 5 planets in our solar system, the sun in fact, has 8 planets currently.
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Rocky planets (Score:2)
Rocky planets are usually found closer to the star than the gas giants - the heat from the the young star will make lighter elements evaporate, you see. So if this planet
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The sample for rocky planets being closer to the sun than gas giants is really small: just us. There are a lot of systems out there with gas giants in very close orbits around their sun, however. So basically, we have no idea where rocky planets are in your average solar system, or how common they should be. We have a lot of theories about the formation o
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Perhaps not, but our descendants might. We don't have to stay human forever.
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Come to think of it, I will never meet you in person, so I guess you're meaningless too.
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I'd settle for a swarm of powerful telescopes all over the solar system. If we can't go there, then we might at least get some good pictures.
Also, the phrase above doesn't preclude generation ships. Sure, the original crew won't live to visit a distant planet, but their ((great-)grand-)children would.