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Space

Astronomers Spot First Possible Exoplanet Outside Our Galaxy (theguardian.com) 28

A possible Saturn-sized planet identified in the distant Whirlpool Galaxy could be the first exoplanet to be detected outside the Milky Way. From a report: The exoplanet candidate appears to be orbiting an X-ray binary -- made up of a normal star and a collapsed star or black hole -- with its distance from this binary roughly equivalent to the distance of Uranus from the sun. The discovery opens up a new window to search for exoplanets -- planets orbiting stars beyond our Sun -- at greater distances than ever before. Although nearly 5,000 exoplanets have been detected so far, all of them are in the Milky Way galaxy -- with few further than about 3,000 light years from Earth.

An exoplanet in the spiral Messier 51 (M51) galaxy -- also called the Whirlpool Galaxy because of its distinctive shape -- would be about 28m light years away. Dr Rosanne Di Stefano of the Center for Astrophysics at Harvard and Smithsonian in Cambridge, US, who led the research, said: "Since the 1750s, it has been conjectured that the dim distant nebulas, now called galaxies, are island universes: large, gravitationally-bound stellar populations similar to our home, the Milky Way. Our discovery of the planet candidate ... gives us the first peek into external populations of planetary systems, extending the reach of planet searches to distances roughly 10,000 times more distant."

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Astronomers Spot First Possible Exoplanet Outside Our Galaxy

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  • by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Tuesday October 26, 2021 @02:24PM (#61929175)

    Because they only saw one orbit, they'll have to wait years until it transits again to see if it's real.

  • Get a probe over there ASAP!
  • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Tuesday October 26, 2021 @02:52PM (#61929279)
    This is a technological feat to be sure. But isn't an exoplanet of less value to us the further away it is? Distance is the enemy for any purpose I can think of, whether studying, communicating with, extracting resources, or (inconceivably) traveling to. Thousands of exoplanets have been detected in the Milky Way. Does an exoplanet in a different galaxy have special value, such as 'seeing back in time'? (Seems like not, since planets don't emit enough to be seen from very far / long ago).
    • Definitely great value to conform that planet creation is not specific to Milky Way. As a study object yea, that's harder by many orders of magnitude.

      • It helps determine the rules of physics are indeed universal at smaller and smaller scales through the universe, and do not vary over the great expanses between galaxies. Our detection mechanisms will get better as our technology to build bigger and better telescopes increases, plus with the increasing access to LEO and soon the rest of our solar system with things like Starship, we will be able to send larger and more sensitive apparatus to higher and higher altitudes, both in comparison to the earth, as w
    • For the purposes of sending a probe or ship there, a different star in this galaxy and another galaxy have no practical difference for the foreseeable future. For everything besides that, yes, it still has scientific value.
      • For the purposes of sending a probe or ship there, a different star in this galaxy and another galaxy have no practical difference for the foreseeable future. For everything besides that, yes, it still has scientific value.

        I dunno, propelling micro solar sail probes with a giant fk’n laser and rocketing them to the alpha Centauri system not under their own power seems like it’s doable. We’d need a bit better nuclear battery tech In each one, weight optimized and miniaturized for space. Better and bigger lasers preferably in space, but nothing revolutionary. You’d let them go a few weeks apart and could then relay signals back along the line with no slowing needed so they blow thru the system but ar

        • no slowing needed so they blow thru the system but are still able to relay data.

          That would allow you a shorter time-of-flight. But would require a MUCH shorter time of investigation.

          The plans I've seen call for launching lasers (well, masers, but "Meh") in Solar space, but almost immediately (a few years) after leaving the Solar system, the "solar sails" are flipped to start decelerating under the influence of the light from Alpha Centauri A. Obviously, the decelerating force increases sharply as you appro

          • That would allow you a shorter time-of-flight. But would require a MUCH shorter time of investigation.

            Sure, but you have many probes so it’s not a problem. Yes, even lasers drop off with the square of distance so the propellant wouldn’t work the whole way and you would likely turn them around but at the same time the light wouldn’t likely be enough to slow them to stay in the system. Probably better to get results decades earlier and have reduced observation time per probe at least in my opinion.

            beyond any credible nuclear battery I've heard of (name your isotopes ! ?)

            RTG tech lasts for about 15 years already [energyeducation.ca]

            and could easily be built to last hundreds if nee

            • To get here they just need to send us a signal. Which contains the computer program that they are. We execute it and bingo they are here. Can travel very large distances, at the speed of light.

              (There is a very short time frame between the development of radio and computers taking over, about two hundred years, nothing in 4 billion years. So any little green men are almost certainly computers.)

            • That would allow you a shorter time-of-flight. But would require a MUCH shorter time of investigation.

              Sure, but you have many probes so itâ(TM)s not a problem.

              Did you spend any time in the several years leading up to either the (134340) Pluto or (486958) Arrakoth fly-by missions, watching the way the mission controllers were having to use early approach imagery to revise the route and observation schedules? And that was with just a few light-hours delay on top of the decision time.

              I'll be generous and

              • You’re not even replying to the right person and have so much wrong here including lots of false assumptions you made yourself by not reading my comment. Next time, try making comments with enough logical consistency that they can be considered wrong instead of not even that.
                • I'm replying to

                  by burtosis ( 1124179 ) Alter Relationship on 2021-10-27 20:35 (#61933203)

                  Learn to thread messages. If your display of the page doesn't indicate threading properly, then try switching to the original interface, not whatever the new interface shows.

      • There is a _profound_ distinction between a planet or star in this galaxy, and a star or planet in another galaxy or part of the way there. The nearest part of the Andromeda galaxy, our closest neighbor, is roughly 40 times the distance to the most distant part of the Milky Way. Probes are less likely to last 40 times as long.

        • Our closed neighbours are the magellenic clouds. A mere 300,000 light years. And they are quite easy to see in a dark southern sky.

    • But isn't an exoplanet of less value to us the further away it is?

      For any practical terms, they are all useless.

      The "occultation" method of detection is inherently little affected by distance - as long as you can get your star's image onto a small number of pixels of your detector, often enough so that you can develop a sufficiently long, detailed light curve (brightness versus time). That's going to get really challenging the further away the source is, but theoretically we might be able detect a planet i

      • There ain't going to be any humans in 2300, let alone 3000. Didn't you get the memo about computers?

        • I doubt that's going to make the Shakers, Quakers, and other religious lunatic fringe become "uploaded", or whatever they call it.

          More seriously, I doubt that "uploading" is going to affect the bottom 90% of the population (by various socio-economic measures). Personally, I'm perfectly happy being in the middle 50%.

  • Not very habitable then

  • is whether the inhabitants of these distant worlds recognize all 57 genders, or are primitive backward people who only recognize 56.

  • I mean, if confirmed this is cool, but I have a strong feeling that the margin of error for detection at this range means that its unlikely that this is accurate.

  • there been? Seems like every few months there is a headline about this.
  • TFP is at https://chandra.harvard.edu/ph... [harvard.edu] ; it's probably on Arxiv somewhere too, but there's your preprint. Many of the questions and issues people have raised are answered with the abstract - which is what they're intended to do.

    ABSTRACT

    Many lines of reasoning suggest that external galaxies should host planetary systems but detecting them by methods typically used in our own Galaxy is not possible. An alternative approach is to study the temporal behavior of X-rays emitted by bright extragalactic X-r

The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the `social sciences' is: some do, some don't. -- Ernest Rutherford

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