Help support the Mego Museum
Help support the Mego Museum

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

the first confirmed Earthlike planet outside solar system

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • goldenryan
    coy member
    • Jul 13, 2007
    • 1467

    the first confirmed Earthlike planet outside solar system

    (CNN) -- Scientists have discovered the first confirmed Earthlike planet outside our solar system, they announced Wednesday.


    An artist's impression shows what the planet may look like in close orbit with its sun.

    "This is the first confirmed rocky planet in another system," astronomer Artie Hatzes told CNN, contrasting the solid planet with gaseous ones like Jupiter and Saturn.

    But "Earthlike" is a relative term.

    The planet's composition may be similar to that of Earth, but its environment is more like a vision of hell, the project's lead astronomer said.

    It is so close to the star it orbits "that the place may well look like Dante's Inferno, with a probable temperature on its 'day face' above 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit (2,000 degrees Celsius) and minus-328 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 200 degrees Celsius) on its night face," said Didier Queloz of Geneva Observatory in Switzerland, the project leader.

    Hatzes, explaining that one side of the body is always facing the star and the other side always faces away, said the side "facing the sun is probably molten. The other side could actually have ice" if there is water on the planet.

    "We think it has no atmosphere to redistribute the heat," Hatzes told CNN from Barcelona, Spain, where he is attending the "Pathways Towards Habitable Planets" conference.

    The astronomers were stunned to find a rocky planet so near a star, he said.

    "We would have never dreamed you would find a rocky planet so close," he said. "Its year is less than one of our days."

    The planet, known as CoRoT-7b, was detected early last year, but it took months of observation to determine that it had a composition roughly similar to Earth's, the European Southern Observatory said in a statement.

    Astronomers were able to measure the dimensions of the planet by watching as it passed in front of the star it orbits, then carried out 70 hours of study of the planet's effect on its star to infer its weight.

    With that information in hand, they were able to calculate its density -- and were thrilled with what they found, Hatzes said.

    "What makes this exciting is you compare the density of this planet to the planets in our solar system, it's only Mercury, Venus and Earth that are similar," Hatzes, of the Thuringer observatory in Germany, told CNN.

    They were helped by the fact that CoRoT-7b is relatively close to Earth -- about 500 light years away, in the constellation of Monoceros, the Unicorn.

    "It's in our solar neighborhood," Hatzes said. "The thing that made it easier is it's relatively close, so it's relatively bright. If this star was much much farther away, we wouldn't have been able to do these measurements."

    At about five times Earth's mass (though not quite twice as large in circumference), it is the smallest planet ever spotted outside our solar system.

    It also has the fastest orbit. The planet whizzes around its star more than seven times faster than Earth moves, and is 23 times closer to the star than Mercury is to our sun.

    The planet was first detected early in 2008 by the CoRoT satellite, a 30-centimeter space telescope launched by the European Space Agency in December 2006, specifically with the mission of detecting rocky planets outside the solar system.

    At least 42 scientists at 17 institutions on three continents worked on the project.

    They are publishing their findings in a special issue of the Astronomy and Astrophysics journal on October 22 as "The CoRoT-7 Planetary System: Two Orbiting Super-Earths."
    Scientists have discovered the first confirmed Earthlike planet outside our solar system, they announced Wednesday.
  • toys2cool
    Ultimate Mego Warrior
    • Nov 27, 2006
    • 28605

    #2
    That's pretty cool
    "Time to nut up or shut up" -Tallahassee

    http://ultimatewarriorcollection.webs.com/
    My stuff on facebook Incompatible Browser | Facebook

    Comment

    • kryptosmaster
      Removed.
      • Jun 14, 2008
      • 0

      #3
      I think "earth-like" needs a new definition.
      Doesn't sound very earth-like to me.
      Shouldn't "earth-like" be used to describe a planet similar to earth, meaning potentially habitable?
      Rich

      Comment

      • goldenryan
        coy member
        • Jul 13, 2007
        • 1467

        #4
        Originally posted by kryptosmaster
        I think "earth-like" needs a new definition.
        Doesn't sound very earth-like to me.
        Shouldn't "earth-like" be used to describe a planet similar to earth, meaning potentially habitable?
        Rich
        how much of earth have you seen, apparently you never been to texas
        Last edited by goldenryan; Sep 16, '09, 5:06 PM.

        Comment

        • kryptosmaster
          Removed.
          • Jun 14, 2008
          • 0

          #5
          Originally posted by goldenryan
          how much of earth have you seen, apparently you never been to texas
          I said "potentially".


          I can't see flying to a molten planet and building a house, LOL.
          Yes, I have driven through texas a couple times. Whew, that's a lotta nothing there.
          It's like an endless road with nothing to look at.
          Rich

          Comment

          • Mikey
            Verbose Member
            • Aug 9, 2001
            • 47258

            #6
            After they took Pluto off the solar systems planet list and now tell us our solar system has only 8 planets I lost all respect for astronomers.

            Now they're looking for more planets outside the solar system ? ...

            Why, so they can name them planets and then change their minds after a few years ?

            Comment

            • Hector
              el Hombre de Acero
              • May 19, 2003
              • 31852

              #7
              There's a reason why Pluto lost its planet status:

              2006: IAU classification
              Main article: 2006 definition of planet

              The debate came to a head in 2006 with an IAU resolution that created an official definition for the term "planet". According to this resolution, there are three main conditions for an object to be considered a 'planet':

              1. The object must be in orbit around the Sun.
              2. The object must be massive enough to be a sphere by its own gravitational force. More specifically, its own gravity should pull it into a shape of hydrostatic equilibrium.
              3. It must have cleared the neighbourhood around its orbit.

              Pluto fails to meet the third condition, since its mass was only 0.07 times that of the mass of the other objects in its orbit (Earth's mass, by contrast, is 1.7 million times the remaining mass in its own orbit).

              The IAU further resolved that Pluto be classified in the simultaneously created dwarf planet category, and that it act as the prototype for the plutoid category of trans-Neptunian objects, in which it would be separately, but concurrently, classified


              Pluto - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
              sigpic

              Comment

              • goldenryan
                coy member
                • Jul 13, 2007
                • 1467

                #8
                imagine if there really was life on that planet? The organisms there must be immune to heat or have some amazing skin/armor to live at 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit on the side that faces the star, and the organisms on the dark side must have amazing internal heat in their body to withstand the minus-328 degrees Fahrenheit.
                Last edited by goldenryan; Sep 16, '09, 8:13 PM.

                Comment

                • RG
                  Removed.
                  • Oct 1, 2004
                  • 235

                  #9
                  Originally posted by goldenryan
                  imagine if there really was life on that planet? The organisms there must be immune to heat or have some amazing skin/armor to live at 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit on the side that faces the star, and the organisms on the dark side must have amazing internal heat in their body to withstand the minus-328 degrees Fahrenheit.

                  or maybe the live between the two ... right in the middle just right where the heat melts the ice, making nice watter supply and living the good life??

                  Comment

                  • kryptosmaster
                    Removed.
                    • Jun 14, 2008
                    • 0

                    #10
                    Reminds me of Star Trek: Nemesis and the planet Remus.
                    Rich

                    Comment

                    • rche
                      channeling Bob Wills
                      • Mar 26, 2008
                      • 7391

                      #11
                      Originally posted by kryptosmaster
                      I said "potentially".


                      I can't see flying to a molten planet and building a house, LOL.
                      Yes, I have driven through texas a couple times. Whew, that's a lotta nothing there.
                      It's like an endless road with nothing to look at.
                      Rich
                      This is coming from a fellow who lives in AZ. Tucson to Yuma I-10; ain't much there either, baby.

                      Comment

                      • kryptosmaster
                        Removed.
                        • Jun 14, 2008
                        • 0

                        #12
                        Originally posted by rche
                        This is coming from a fellow who lives in AZ. Tucson to Yuma I-10; ain't much there either, baby.
                        The question was about Texas, hehe
                        I never said Az didnt have stretches of nothing. Try driving between Winslow and payson...scaaaaary miles of NOTHING.
                        Rich

                        Comment

                        • SlipperyLilSuckers
                          MeGoing
                          • May 14, 2003
                          • 9031

                          #13
                          Interesting.

                          Comment

                          • Gorn Captain
                            Invincible Ironing Man
                            • Feb 28, 2008
                            • 10549

                            #14
                            Originally posted by goldenryan
                            But "Earthlike" is a relative term.

                            It is so close to the star it orbits "that the place may well look like Dante's Inferno, with a probable temperature on its 'day face' above 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit (2,000 degrees Celsius).
                            Spock: "We've discovered an M-class planet, Captain."
                            Kirk: "Right. Beaming down now! It might have hot women."
                            Spock: "Wait, Captain. It's not the women that are hot, but the...."

                            Sound of Kirk beaming down anyway and frying like bacon....
                            .
                            .
                            .
                            "When things are at their darkest, it's a brave man that can kick back and party."

                            Comment

                            • MIB41
                              Eloquent Member
                              • Sep 25, 2005
                              • 15633

                              #15
                              Gorn they found your secret pad!!

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              😀
                              🥰
                              🤢
                              😎
                              😡
                              👍
                              👎