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Space NASA Science

Two Potentially Life-Friendly Planets Found Orbiting a Nearby Star (nationalgeographic.com) 217

A tiny, old star just 12 light-years away might host two temperate, rocky planets, astronomers announced today. If they're confirmed, both of the newly spotted worlds are nearly identical to Earth in mass, and both planets are in orbits that could allow liquid water to trickle and puddle on their surfaces. National Geographic reports: Scientists estimate that the stellar host, known as Teegarden's star, is at least eight billion years old, or nearly twice the sun's age. That means any planets orbiting it are presumably as ancient, so life as we know it has had more than enough time to evolve. And for now, the star is remarkably quiet, with few indications of the tumultuous stellar quakes and flares that tend to erupt from such objects.

The two worlds orbit a star so faint that it wasn't even spotted until 2003, when NASA astrophysicist Bonnard Teegarden was mining astronomical data sets and looking for dim, nearby dwarf stars that had so far evaded detection. Teegarden's star is a stellar runt that's barely 9 percent of the sun's mass. It's known as an ultra-cool M dwarf, and it emits most of its light in the infrared -- just like the star TRAPPIST-1, which hosts seven known rocky planets. But Teegarden's star is just a third as far from Earth as the TRAPPIST-1 system, which makes it ideal for further characterization.
The team of astronomers reported their findings in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
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Two Potentially Life-Friendly Planets Found Orbiting a Nearby Star

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  • Why does a mirror image of earth the only source of life they can think of? If they could think outside their dated views, they will see life can also exist in fractions of time so tiny they cannot measure it, in places they cannot imagine.
    • by religionofpeas ( 4511805 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @06:13AM (#58787008)

      If they could think outside their dated views, they will see life can also exist in fractions of time so tiny they cannot measure it, in places they cannot imagine.

      How do you know ?

      Also, if you have limited resources to search for life, it simply makes sense to prioritize the most likely candidates first.

    • by Wargames ( 91725 )

      There may be life forms that live in time and experience space passing. Songs and clouds come to mind. It appears they are looking for planets that are habitable or useful to humans specifically.

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      Why does a mirror image of earth the only source of life they can think of?

      Why do you think that is the case?
      Why do you think that especially considering the fact that isn't what was said, but explicitly "life as we know it"

      If they could think outside their dated views, they will see life can also exist in fractions of time so tiny they cannot measure it, in places they cannot imagine.

      But life as we know it means we need to KNOW it, not imagine it or think it or dream it up or not be ruled out by the laws of physics.

      Do you have an example of such known life to share with the class?
      Because if not, that is the answer to your question.

      We don't know that exists because you refuse to share with anyone the fact it does exist.
      We exclude "life as we

  • by tinkerton ( 199273 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @05:16AM (#58786864)

    Quick , let's send some nukes and kill them now that they're not expecting it yet!

    • You know if Spock were here, he'd say I was an irrational, illogical human being for going on a mission like that... Sounds like fun!
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @08:34AM (#58787376) Homepage Journal

      There was some serious discussion of this back in the 80s. Maybe it's better to hide and reduce our emissions, because if we are spotted the other civilisation may decide it's too much of a risk and take us out. Probably wouldn't even see the relativistic bombs coming.

      • I recall speculations like that,
        I'm no gamer but I got introduced to a single player game somewhere, must have been the nineties, where you had to develop your planet and civilization and invest in different things to keep defence/economic/environmental and parameters in check . I have no idea about the name. So the game was going along nicely and I was developing the planet and suddenly there was some alien encounter where a vessel of my planet was destroyed. So far the encounter with aliens. A bit later t

      • There's no way to hide the fact we have an active carbon cycle and an oxygen rich atmosphere. Nor can we hide the fact Earth is lousy with water. Any alien civilization with a observatory capable of terrestrial planet finding will know Earth is likely teeming with life. We're at the cusp of having this ability for ourselves.

        If some advanced alien civilization(s) is/are looking to relativistically blast potential opponents the bombs are already on their way. They wouldn't need to wait to see signs of the ind

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        And the thing about "relativistic bombs" is that rocks work just as well as anything fancier.

      • The novel "The Three Body Problem" won many sci-fi awards just a couple years ago. It made the argument that the only viable strategy for survival as a species was to exterminate without warning any other civilization that contacts us. Not exactly an upbeat story.
        • There was another novel, "The Killing Star," which didn't exactly make that argument, but was a similar idea. It makes about as much sense as the notion that the first thing you should do in prison is beat someone up: that might work if you knew that you were the only two people in prison, but if that prisoner has friends who you don't know about then you've made a serious mistake. If that prisoner has enemies, then you could, potentially, have made an even worse mistake.
          • "Three Body Problem" tackles that exact objection, arguing that an existential threat is different from a temporary imprisonment. I don't buy the argument, but it took a long time for me to poke holes in it... the author covered a lot of bases.
  • Iron? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sgunhouse ( 1050564 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @05:38AM (#58786934)
    As I understand it, ancient stars are likely to be poor in iron and other heavy elements. So while they may support liquid water, life is a much harder proposition. Or at least complex life.
    • Re:Iron? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @05:45AM (#58786948)

      Tidally locked worlds will also be problematic. Which these likely are. Age, distance.

    • Our solar system's heavy elements were seeded by supernovas, not by our own sun, so it's hard to say. If there was a supernova which also seeded that ancient star's backyard then the current star itself wouldn't make any difference.

  • Life-friendly? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @06:13AM (#58787006)

    Planets are never life-friendly, even our own one tries to kill us every day.

    • And for very good reasons.

    • "even our own one tries to kill us every day."

      That's kind of a backwards way to look at the only place in the universe where life arose, and the ecosystem that provides literally everything to keep every human (and every other creature) alive.

      Thats a really 19th century european attitude, that humanity is against nature. If you look at first nations philosophies, we are meant to be at one with nature, as our one and only mother and source of all known life in the universe.

      If providing all the building block

  • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @06:19AM (#58787030)
    "JUST" 12 light years away! Pack your things, folks, we're moving! Sigh. When will journalists realize that even "just" 1 light year is a fantastically outrageously large distance and we humans have no hope ever of going that far?
    • Journalists are just ignorant, because they have never been educated in the area. Space Nutters know better, but choose to believe in fantasy instead of Physics.

    • Re:There you have it (Score:5, Interesting)

      by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @08:56AM (#58787478)

      When will journalists realize that even "just" 1 light year is a fantastically outrageously large distance and we humans have no hope ever of going that far?

      Hmm, 10,000 years ago, it would have been perfectly reasonable to say "even the moon is a fantastically outrageously large distance and we humans have no hope of ever going that far".

      And next month is the 50th Anniversary of us doing just that.

      Are we going to visit another star system soon? Probably not. Depending on how we define "soon", or course.

      Within 1k years? Fair chance. Not great, but fair.

      Within 10K years? Probably.

      Within a million years? Unless we drive ourselves into extinction before then, certainly....

      • Within a million years? Unless we drive ourselves into extinction before then, certainly....

        Civilization can collapse without extinction. It has happened many times before.

        • To be fair civilizations have collapsed before, but we don't know of any global civilization collapses, yet. In the last few decades we've seen a number of countries collapse, but they haven't brought down the rest. So I wonder whether or not such a collapse is even possible now without an existential threat of some sort that is world wide. Not that there aren't any existential threats that we know of like Nuclear War, Global Warming, and Asteroid Impacts.

          • by HiThere ( 15173 )

            Global Warming probably isn't an existential threat. Probably. More likely it would just increase the probability of, say, war to the point where THAT became the existential problem.

            OTOH, it does clearly threaten civilization. And it MIGHT cause a global collapse without causing human extinction. True, much less than 1% of the population would survive, but that's not extinction. The problem is that I think that would put the end to metal-based civilization. The knowledge of how to make metals would di

      • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
        There is no mathematical proof that denies us the moon. Einstein's equations deny us faster than light travel and show many consequences of speeds approaching light speed. So far he has not been proven wrong. Quite the opposite.
        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          There's nothing about interstellar "migrations" that require faster than light travel. It's a lot safer to travel slower, and if you do, by the end of the trip the people are going to want to live in their "ship" rather than on a planet they really aren't suited for anyway. So plan it that way.

    • That's only if you take the perspective of individuals getting there and not a civilization-level perspective. We all want the idea of getting on a spacecraft and personally going to another star, but that's not how it's going to be. However, that doesn't at all mean that we as a civilization can't "get" there. We have plenty of constructions that took hundreds of years to complete.

    • It is true that we ourselves have no hope of ever traveling that distance, but our grandkids might even without new technology. They just have to be willing to use nuclear fission rockets and manufacture and launch from the moon. An Orion ship could do it in a few human lifetimes. We may have to Chernobyl the moon, but we could do it.

      Well assuming lunar mining and manufacturing ever became a thing. Even without that given enough time we could probably launch enough parts to the moon to be assembled and laun

  • by andydread ( 758754 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @09:11AM (#58787536)
    The problem with planets orbiting a red dwarf is that the "goldilocks zone" - where liquid water can exist - is very close to the star. This usually causes tidal locking causing one face of the planet to always face the star, roasting that side of the planet and the dark side of the planet is well....dark and cold. Also red dwarf type stars are known for throwing off massive flares regularly due to their lower gravity of course, not to mention the amount of radiation that any living thing on such planets will be exposed to. So no. we are not going to find life around red dwarf stars even if the planet is in the "goldilocks zone"
    • by Richard Kirk ( 535523 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @10:15AM (#58787908)

      The small robit, and the great age probably mean the planets are tidally locked, so the same fact always is turned towards the star.

      On earth, the places where life evolved was often at the boundaries. On the sea-shore. By deep ocean vents. In or by rivers. Where there is a spread of temperatures, humidity, and other factors. If you have a tidally-locked planet, you will have a hot side and a cold side, but you will also have a twilight belt. It will be relatively safe from solar flares because the belt will see the star tangentially through the atmosphere. Rocks and outcrops will cast deep shadows. This star is supposed to be quiet, but it only takes one big flare in a million years would be enough.

      The twilight belt may be quite wide if the planes have libration the way our moon does. Somewhere along the twilight belt, you will have your goldilocks temperature. We have no experience of life on a tidally-locked planet, but it does not seem silly to me.

      • Agreed however i'm not sure a planet with even the most optimal twilight belt will be able to evolve advanced civilizations such as ours due to the lack or access to resources.
      • If only your first name was James rather than Richard. *sigh* Is your middle name Tiberius by any chance? ;)

  • by Alwin Barni ( 5107629 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @10:32AM (#58788010)

    Not only this one, but also the Bernard star has a potentially habitable planet around twice as heavy as the Earth. The Bernard star has lots of similarities to the mentioned in the article Teegarden. Both are about 8bln years old, both are red dwarfs, about 12ly away and both are relatively quiet, which might be due to their age (red dwarfs are known to have violent flares - like e.g Proxima Centauri, which recently fried it's planet with an extreme flare). So lots of places to go for the starshot project.

    Let's speculate about some properties of potential intelligent life evolved on a planet about twice the size of Earth, around a red dwarf:
    - it is said that having manipulative limbs is critical for technological civilization - ergo hands like limbs
    - so is fire - ergo land creatures
    - too many limbs is not economical - ergo likely 4 (2 specialized manipulative, 2 additional for walking) - as all the Earth bigger size creatures
    - such creatures would be smaller then e.g. us due to gravity and energy needed to supply their brains (intelligent land creatures would not reach sizes of dinosaurs)
    - will have big eyes, so in case they visited Earth they would need good sun glasses, thus being advanced would have some sun protective contact membrane, which for us would appear close to black
    - definitely a head, since all sensory organs have to move despite the rest of the body, and have to be close to the central data processing organ
    - likely only 2 eyes in front (stereo vision and predatory ancestry)
    - skin color would depend on their chemistry needed for energy, it is said that oxygen is the best (abundant and highly reactive) so they might be reddish (if iron, e.g. hemoglobin) or bluish (if copper, e.g. haemocyanin)

    It's all just fun speculation, kind of a reverse engineering from LGM.

    Disclaimer: I'am aware of the fact that things can go in many unimaginable ways with life, however on the other hand a chance is only one factor the other is economy and universal laws of nature.

  • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @11:31AM (#58788316) Homepage Journal

    We've either found Zaphod Beeblebrox's home system, or we found the planet that all the hipsters hate.

  • So these planets are the right size and the right temperature. These are important, yes. But they are only two of the millions of things needed to support life. How about, an ecosystem? Sure, you can build a biosphere in such a place. But we can do that on the moon, too. The circle of life is SO interconnected that it's impossible to really support life with just a few species in a glass bubble. Such an existence will require a functioning support and resupply system for a long, long time. That's kind of ha

  • . . . .but you're on your own to get there. . .

    Last I checked, NASA's "Alcuibierre Warp" design turns out not to be practical, anytime soon . . . . [jalopnik.com]

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