Terrestrial (Rocky) Planet Discovered
KilgoryTrout writes "A 'super-Earth' planet was identified in orbit around mu Arae, a star 50 light years away. It orbits at 2 AUs and surface gravity is 14gs. Two gas giants have been detected in orbit about the star. Space.com's article suggests that it is a failed gas giant's rocky core."
It may take a couple hundred years to get there; but there's bound to be a group of people eager to go on a long-term mission to this place - bring some kids along and make sure things are mixed up enough so the babies aren't West Virginians after a generation or three - and report back when they get there.
I know it's a lot more complicated than that, but we should. (and I'm from WVa so I'm not really being mean)
I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
This is very interesting, however it isn't the most "Earthlike" planet found yet. There are three planets generally ignored by scientists because they are dead and orbit a neutron star. However they are Earth sized and there is a possibility that in the distant past they may have harbored life.
It would be monumental to find evidence that life on Earth isn't a singleton freak accident, even if we found it on worlds that could never harbor life again.
- For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat
found a bit more here:
2 2-04.html
http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-rel/pr-2004/pr-
cant find anything about the 2AU. is that possible? 2AU radius and 10day period?
It says the super-earth is so close to its star that it orbits in 10 days. A nearby gas giant is orbiting at 2 AU. Also, they say the mass is 14 times that of Earth. That would imply a surface gravity of 14G only if it was the same size as
Earth, which could only happen if it were made out of uranium or something.
I guess a radius 2.4 times that of Earth, if it's made of the same stuff, or less if it has more iron and less silicates.
The article is a little short on info, but states of the discovered plane "It completes its tight orbit in less than 10 days" so we can assume it is much closer to the sun.
If I was worried about Karma, I'd eat tofu.
While researchers do not know the full range of conditions under which life can survive, the newly discovered world, with its hot surface, is not the sort of place biologists would expect to find life as we know it.
No, of course not. Life there would posess super-human strength as an adaptation to the enormous gravity. Were inhabitants of this planet to visit Earth, they would be faster than a speeding bullet, and stronger than a locomotive. I wager they'd be able to jump tall buildings with a single bound.
I wonder if anyone's thought of a name for this planet?
(How can there be two dozen comments, but nobody made this connection yet?)
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.