Welcome Forum The Lounge Earth’s “Bigger Cousin” Detected

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  • #680
    Garibaldi
    Keymaster

    Thanks to Yoda’s forum for the link:

    Quote:
    Astronomers announced today the discovery of the smallest planet so far found outside of our solar system. About seven-and-a-half times as massive as Earth, and about twice as wide, this new extrasolar planet may be the first rocky world ever found orbiting a star similar to our own.

    “This is the smallest extrasolar planet yet detected and the first of a new class of rocky terrestrial planets,” said team member Paul Butler of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. “It’s like Earth’s bigger cousin.”

    Currently around 150 extrasolar planets are known, and the number continues to grow. But most of these far-off worlds are large gas giants like Jupiter. Only recently have astronomers started detecting smaller massed objects

    “We keep pushing the limits of what we can detect, and we’re getting closer and closer to finding Earths,” said team member Steven Vogt from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

    The discovery of Earth’s distant cousin was announced today at a press conference at the National Science Foundation in Arlington, Va.

    The new planet orbits Gliese 876, an M dwarf star 15 light years away in the constellation Aquarius. The “super-Earth” is not alone: there are two other planets – both Jupiter-sized – in the same system. This third world was detected by a tiny extra wobble that it caused in the central star.

    From this wobble, the researchers measured a minimum mass for the new planet of 5.9 Earth masses. The planet orbits makes a full orbit in a speedy 1.94 days, implying a distance to the central star of 2 million miles – or about 2 percent of the distance between the Earth and the Sun.

    Orbiting so close to its star, scientists speculate that the planet’s temperature is a toasty 400 to 750 degrees Fahrenheit (200 to 400 degrees Celsius). This is likely too hot for the planet to retain much gas, like Jupiter does. Therefore, the planet must be mostly solid.

    “The planet’s mass could easily hold onto an atmosphere,” said Gregory Laughlin from UC Santa Cruz. “It would still be considered a rocky planet, probably with an iron core and a silicon mantle. It could even have a dense steamy water layer.”

    Here’s a picture (artist’s vision):
    050613_gl876_planet_02.jpg

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  • #13446
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    All this is very interesting… And I mean it even though the formula could seem ironic…
    And it is, just a little, but not on a first degree basis… I explain :
    We, here, for some of us (most I believe) are interested in many, many things… Cars of course, but also Sci-Fi as this topic is related to and crosses the “border” of fiction to come to scientific reality icon_cool.gif
    But then comes the second degree : how many of you just hate the feeling of that kind of discovery such as interesting as this one, KNOWING that we’ll probably NEVER, NEVER see this with our eyes…?
    That’s a real regret I have, I would sometimes give half of my life to see all these things…Or at least some of it…
    May the Force be with us to have the luck to encounter those moments in our next lives.

    #13447
    Garibaldi
    Keymaster

    You’re right, there is a lot of interesting things that we probably won’t be able to see because of the sheer distances involved – unless they discover a means of FTL!!!

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