Water Found in Exoplanet's Atmosphere
anthemaniac writes "Astronomers have long suspected that water should exist in the atmospheres of extrasolar planets. Now they have evidence. Water has been discovered in a planet called HD209458b, which was previously found to have oxygen. From the article: 'The discovery ... means one of the most crucial elements for life as we know it can exist around planets orbiting other stars.' But don't go looking for little green men. You might remember HD209458b as a 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star."
This discovery only reinforces the possibility of life outside our solar system; we've only discovered a few extra-solar planets, and at least one among those we've seen has life. So:
How many people now think that ETs of some form do exist?
I live on HD209458b you insensitive clod.
In a world of acronyms, the words are the real victims.
But don't go looking for little green men. You might remember HD209458b as a 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star."
Where there is hot water, there are saunas. Where there are saunas, there are tourists. Thus this remote planet has life, and most likley drinks with little umbrellas (or "snotzwathctls" as the local dialect probably refers to them).
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Why, just the other day I said "Hey, remember HD209458b"? and everyone was like "Oh yeah, that's the 'Hot Jupiter', right?"
Just think of all the marine life that lives in and around the thermal vents on the sea floor... Temperature isn't much of a challenge if you're determined enough!
"When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty." -Thom
How about large, flying whales?
There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
"You might remember me from such planets as HD209458b, the 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star, and from Earth, the deadliest planet of them all."
I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
There is a great book that anyone interested in this question should read: Rare Earth.
It is a very well-researched book that goes into great detail on all the different terms of the drake equation (and a few extra terms) and shows what the best scientific evidence suggests are the actual values for those terms. The bottom line of the book is that single-celled life is probably incredibly common, it's probably everywhere. Life that's big enough for you to actually see is probably pretty rare. Intelligent life is very rare, and technological civilizations are practically a miracle.
someone after the 'hot jupiters' article in in slashdot had had said that his/her favorite exclamation was going to be "HOT JUPITERS !!!!" . i wonder what s/he is doing now.
ah hey. theres a new meme for you.
Read radical news here
Thermal resistant bacteria can survive temperatures are up to 600 degrees in sea vents along the ocean floors and hot springs in Yellowstone.
They just need to evolve in that environment.
http://saveie6.com/
The summary is incomplete. It tells us this :
But don't go looking for little green men. You might remember HD209458b as a 'hot Jupiter' that boils under the glow of its very nearby star."
but neglects to answer the very important question this raises :
Given what we remember about HD209458b, what colour little men should we look for?
My initial guess was red, but there's no guarantee HD209458b-ians can even get sunburned.
Darth --
Nil Mortifi, Sine Lucre
Sure bacteria live inside sea vents and even in nuclear reactor cores. Many of these don't even need oxygen (so using oxygen as an indicator of life is ill informed). Tube worms and other animals found near the vents don't live inside the vents, they live around them where the water is a lot cooler (way less than 100C).
Engineering is the art of compromise.
There are other systems of life possible, without water, so long as they meet our definitions of life. Im always suprised by this very anthropocentric ('terrapocentric'? :) approach for the requirements for life...
Perhaps we're the fortunate "Ancients" or "Progenitor" race should we ever start traveling the stars?
The cesspool just got a check and balance.
These 'Obligatory...' posts are common enough now to be shortened into Internet Acronyms (IAs). For example, you might have written:
Subject: Ob.
Body: IFOWON HD209458 overlords.
This IA has the added benefit of sounding a bit like the phrase it's replacing.
Likewise, slashdot humor can get the IA treatment:
In Soviet Russia = ISR
Imagine a Beowulf cluster of = IABCO
But does it run Linux? = BDIRL?
and so on. Doing this would save precious bits, and would serve well as a in-joke for the Slashdot cognoscenti. Thus, I, Anonymous Coward, the most prolific poster on Slashdot, hereby recommend that IAs replace all standing Slashdot catch-phrases.