500 Hundred Alien Planets -- Wow !

by Rabbit 18 Replies latest social current

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    I know this doesn't have anything 'JW' about it, but, I think it's pretty cool. Our Universe -- is really, really...BIG !

    I WANT TO BELIEVE. Life is out there - somewhere. (not in the Pleiades Constellation, tho'... )

    So, do you think there is life out there ? Simple ? Intelligent ? Diversified like earth ?

    500th Alien Planet Could Be Discovered This Month

    SPACE.com mike Wall
    space.com Senior Writer
    space.com Tue Oct 12, 6:15 pm ET

    Less than 20 years after first finding a planet beyond our solar system, astronomers are poised to hit a big milestone — the discovery of alien world No. 500.

    As of Tuesday (Oct. 12), the confirmed tally stands at 494 extrasolar planets, with more than 70 discovered so far in 2010 alone. At that rate, No. 500 could be announced before October is out — just a month or so after another watershed moment, the discovery of the first potentially habitable alien planet.

    "Where we are, I'd expect that by the end of October, we'll be at 500 if things keep going the way they're going," said Jon Jenkins of the SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Institute. Jenkins is the analysis lead for NASA's planet-hunting Kepler mission.

    And the 1,000th world could be discovered surprisingly soon, as the space-based Kepler mission has already offered up hundreds of planet candidates that await further observation and confirmation.

    Alien worlds piling up

    Most of these extrasolar planets, or exoplanets, have been found using two different strategies.

    Astronomers can scrutinize the movements of faraway stars, watching for the telltale gravitational tug of orbiting planets. Or they look for tiny dips in a star's brightness — evidence that a planet is transiting, or passing in front of, the star from our perspective.

    Astronomers first definitively found an alien world in 1992, when researchers led by Alex Wolszczan of Penn State detected two planets orbiting a rotating neutron star, or pulsar, about 1,000 light-years from Earth. Confirmation of a planet circling a "normal" main-sequence star did not come until 1995.

    Since then, however, the alien planet finds have been rolling in, accelerating in recent years as planet hunters honed their techniques and instruments became more powerful. [Gallery: Strangest Alien Planets]

    That trend will likely continue, Jenkins said, as data keeps pouring in from Kepler — which was launched in March 2009 to search for Earth-like alien planets — and other telescopes.

    The Kepler mission, for example, has confirmed and announced seven new alien worlds to date. But Kepler, which hunts by looking for transiting planets, has already identified more than 700 "candidates" — stars that may harbor alien planets.

    Researchers are following up on these promising leads, trying to rule out any false alarms. They're checking out the candidates with ground-based instruments as well as orbiting assets like the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope.

    When such work is done, the number of known alien worlds could increase by several hundred — and it could happen soon.

    "One could reasonably expect many of these to be vetted within the next year or so," Jenkins told SPACE.com.

    The number of confirmed exoplanets could rise even more dramatically if some of the candidates host multiple planets.

    Recent discoveries suggest this is not an unreasonable expectation. Five planets are known to orbit the star HD 10180, for example, and at least six — including the potentially habitable planet Gliese 581g — circle the star Gliese 581 just over 20 light-years from Earth.

    "We have a sense now that our solar system isn't such a weirdo," Jenkins said. "It may be that multi-planet systems are quite common."

    Reaching other milestones

    Other important milestones could follow closely on the heels of exoplanet 500, not all of them numerical. One big moment that should happen relatively soon, Jenkins said, is the discovery of a potentially habitable alien world that's transiting its star, a setup that would allow for more detailed observations.

    The rocky, roughly Earth-sized Gliese 581g apparently does not transit its star as seen from our point of view, and as a result astronomers will have trouble searching for signs of life on that alien world, at least for a while.

    When a planet transits its parent star, starlight passes through its atmosphere (if the planet has one). Astronomers can scrutinize this light for compelling evidence of life in the planet's air, such as significant quantities of both methane and oxygen. As one example, a gas giant planet called HD 209458b has been found to contain oxygen, carbon and water.

    So the discovery of a transiting Earth-like world in its parent star's habitable zone — that range of distances that supports the existence of liquid water — would occasion some celebration in planet-hunting circles, as well as a frenzy of follow-up research. And it could be just around the corner.

    "I wouldn't be surprised if that happened next year," Jenkins said.

    SPACE.com offers rich and compelling content about space science, travel and exploration as well as astronomy, technology, business news and more. The site boasts a variety of popular features including our space image of the day and other space pictures,space videos, Top 10s, Trivia, podcasts and Amazing Images submitted by our users. Join our community, sign up for our free newsletters and register for our RSS Feeds today!

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  • Sam Whiskey
    Sam Whiskey

    I'm beginning to believe that we are not alone in the universe....

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/space/sc_space/storytext/500thalienplanetcouldbediscoveredthismonth/37990615/SIG=12b72nvgr/*http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/alien-planet-number-500-101012.html

    Sorry. Don't know what happened, I copied and pasted the whole story...well, here's the link above.

    Speaking of the Pleiades Constellation...Jehovah used to have a home/vacation cabin or something there. That is... according to Old Light JW's. Ever wonder what kind of neighbors He had out there ?? You're gonna LOVE His community, it's FULL of other Gods !!!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades_(Greek_mythology)

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    In just our solar system are 15 or 20 moons.

    I think probably, there is other life out there. It could be wierd, living on methane or sulpher, instead of carbohydrates and oxygen.

    S

  • SacrificialLoon
    SacrificialLoon

    The chance for intelligent life to devlop maybe astronomically small, but the universe is astronomically big.

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    I think probably, there is other life out there. It could be wierd, living on methane or sulpher, instead of carbohydrates and oxygen.

    Weird? Probably. When you see some of the critters under the deep blue sea -- that lived in the past, current ones and the newly discovered, we have huge biodiversity in our blue spot in the galaxy.

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    I think it is very likely that microbial life will be found on other planets in our own solar system, and that multicellular life may exist on one or more of the moons of Jupiter. It is probably a near-certainty that lower life forms exist elsewhere in the cosmos.

    I'd love for there to be intelligent lifeforms out there too - maybe they'd be more fanatical than wahabis - but the odds for that go down very substantially because the evolution of intelligent life requires a rare combination of planet, placement and time.

    I doubt that I shall live to see first contact, but it would be majorly cool if I did. Imagine how impressed those aliens would be to meet me!

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    I have heard that there is some intelligent life on earth.

    S

  • debator
    debator

    I'd have to see an Alien waving his green arms or antena at us from his planet for me to believe in them. I am not into wishful thinking being read into discovery of planets in a Universe that is...well a Universe! It is comforting they found planets rather than green cheese.

  • simon17
    simon17

    We already know that there are countless billions of alien planets out there. We just never had the technology to spot them. Even knowing they are there is probably meaningless because we could never reach them and it is quite likely that no intelligent species are there with the technology to recieve any messages (either they are behind us in development or way past us-in which case they would most likely be here already). Its cool that they can find them, but it really doesn't get us any closer to finding life outside our own.

    Debator: To believe that God made the incomprehensible universe and filled it with NOTHING for 13 billion years is mind-blowing. And then he picked one and ONLY one planet to start fucking around, creating things and then destroying it with asteroids and ice ages and other incredible catastrophes for 4 billion years. I mean, to believe in God and to believe that is simply an astonishing believe in him wasting a lot of space for nothing.

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