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Space

Analysis of Spacecraft Data Reveals Most Earth-like Planet To Date 83

sciencehabit writes: Scientists analyzing data from NASA's Kepler satellite have boosted the tally of known or suspected planets beyond our solar system to more than 4000, they reported at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. Most are inhospitable — too big, too hot, or too cold for any conceivable life form. But another team seeking to verify Kepler candidates announced they had identified eight new potentially habitable planets, including some close to Earth in size and situation. Unpoetically named 5737.01, one candidate has an orbital period of 331 days and is 30% larger than Earth, Mullally says. That’s good news, because scientists here reported yesterday that planets more than 1.6 times the mass of Earth are unlikely to be dense rocky worlds like ours — assumed to be the only plausible habitats for life.
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Analysis of Spacecraft Data Reveals Most Earth-like Planet To Date

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  • by pjt33 ( 739471 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @12:14PM (#48755095)

    5737.01 ... is 30% larger than Earth, Mullally says. That’s good news, because scientists here reported yesterday that planets more than 1.6 times the mass of Earth are unlikely to be dense rocky worlds like ours

    I'm not seeing the good news. If it has a similar density to Earth, it will have a mass about 1.3^3 ~= 2.2 times the mass of Earth.

    • by AikonMGB ( 1013995 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @12:23PM (#48755225) Homepage

      Why is that a problem, are you concerned about surface gravity? Assuming a similar density to Earth, it would only be ~1.3 Earth gravities, since F_g falls off with r^2.

      • Oops, misread your comment, sorry. Some emphasis on the latter part of the quote would have helped =P

      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        I ended the quote too early: I should have included the bit

        assumed to be the only plausible habitats for life

    • I have a strong suspicion that "size" is being used as a euphemism for mass. I didn't think that Kepler could measure the radius of these planets, only their mass.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The Kepler spacecraft finds exoplanets by the transit method, looking for drops in light intensity of stars when the planet passes in front of the star. This allows them to measure the radius of the planet relative to the star. So in this case, they usually have the radius, but not the mass, at least without making some assumptions. While sometimes they might have already made those assumptions to make comparisons like this in the news, looking here [upr.edu] suggests that it has a radius that is 30-40% larger tha

  • It used to be said that Venus was an 'Earth-like' planet

  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @12:23PM (#48755229) Homepage

    They have all the chemical ingredients, saturn and jupiter both have water clouds containing droplets of water and since we don't know how life actually got going it could well be possible for it to start in a gas giant and at least sustain bacteria or virus sized lifeforms. Even in earths clouds there are bacteria floating about as we've discovered in the last decade or so.

    • Well, in theory, life can be anywhere. The problem is our ability to detect it.

      For example, we've done plenty of studies of life on Earth. We take that knowledge and apply it to Mars to see if we can detect any past or present life. We could do the same thing for Jupiter, but we probably wouldn't detect any life because--if it's there--it behaves differently than life that we know. We'll need some other way to detect it, but if we don't know if it exists, how can we come up with ways to detect it?

      That's

  • Not quite (Score:3, Insightful)

    by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @12:50PM (#48755611) Homepage

    Analysis of Spacecraft Data Reveals Second Most Earth-like Planet To Date

    FTFY.

  • What's conceivable? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by jc42 ( 318812 )

    Most are inhospitable — too big, too hot, or too cold for any conceivable life form.

    Whoever wrote this has obviously never read any science fiction. ;-) The term "conceivable" covers a very wide range of planets (and various environments not based on planets) in which intelligent creatures might evolve.

    Some years back, I read Robert Forward's Camelot at 30K novel, about a human expedition to an inhabited Pluto-like planet out in the Oort Cloud; the title references the mean temperature of that world. Part of the story was a quite imaginative method that the world's inhabitants used to

  • Why can't they report this stuff using the standard classifications [memory-alpha.org] of planets? /me ducks
  • None of them are entirely satisfactory: either the climate isn't quite right in the later part of the afternoon, or the day is half an hour too long, or the sea is exactly the wrong shade of pink.

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