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The Search for More Earths

SirUlli

Senior member
Summary: When astronomers first realized that the stars in the sky were like our Sun, only more distant, they wondered if those stars had planets too. And if they have planets, is there life? Intelligent life? There's an answer - yes or no - but we don't know it yet. NASA and the European Space Agency are working on a series of space and ground-based observatories that may help get an answer soon. In just a decade, you could gaze into the night sky, locate a star, and know that there's life there. Life could be everywhere.

Summary: When astronomers first realized that the stars in the sky were like our Sun, only more distant, they wondered if those stars had planets too. And if they have planets, is there life? Intelligent life? There's an answer - yes or no - but we don't know it yet. NASA and the European Space Agency are working on a series of space and ground-based observatories that may help get an answer soon. In just a decade, you could gaze into the night sky, locate a star, and know that there's life there. Life could be everywhere.

Until a decade ago, astronomers weren't even sure there were any planets outside the Solar System. You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who believed we had the only planets in the entire Universe, but we still didn't have any direct evidence they existed. That all changed in October 5, 1995 when Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz announced they had discovered a planet half the mass of Jupiter orbiting furiously around a star called 51 Pegasi. The discoveries came fast; at last count, there are 122 confirmed extrasolar planets.

But these extrasolar systems generally look nothing like our own Solar System. Many contain massive planets which orbit extremely close to their parent star; no chance for life there. Planets roughly the size and orbit of Jupiter have been uncovered, but it's impossible for the current technology to see anything the size of our own Earth.

Fortunately, there's a series of ground and space-based observatories in the works that should be capable of detecting Earth-sized planets around other stars. NASA and the ESA are working towards the goal of being able to directly photograph these planets and measure the composition of their atmospheres. Find large amounts of oxygen, and you've found life.

Corot 2006

Kepler 2007

and so on..

get the Full and interesting Story at
Astrobilology Magazine

Sir Ulli
 
There are also proposals to build large, ground-based telescopes capable of detecting exo-planets. The OWL, a 100M scope :shocked:, is one of them. If it's ever built .


Thanks SirUlli 🙂
 
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