Exomoon Detection Technique Could Greatly Expand Potential Habitable Systems
Luminary Crush (109477) writes Most of the detected exoplanets thus far have been gas giants which aren't great candidates for life as we know it. However, many of those planets are in fact in the star's habitable zone and could have moons with conditions more favorable. Until now, methods to detect the moons of such gas giants have been elusive, but researchers at the University of Texas, Arlington have discovered a way to detect the interaction of a moon's ionosphere with the parent gas giant from studies of Jupiter's moon Io. The search for 'Pandora' has begun.
We need telescopes, on and around earth. lots of them. Kepler has only scanned a small region of the sky.
What for? We've already determined, a vast variety of planets exist — including those, which can be human-habitable. What good is known, that there is a billion rather than a mere million of them "nearby", if we can't get to even the nearest star anyway?
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
That's a significant aid in finding habitable worlds. There are probably more habitable moons around those gas giants than all the other kinds of planets put together.
A gas giant in the habitable zone of a red dwarf system can protect its moons from the star's solar wind making them great places for life to develop.
Why is it so important to go there? When we find a planet or a moon with habitable conditions and signs of life (like free oxygen in the atmosphere) there's a LOT to study, just spend enough money on space-based telescopes. And at some point we may be curious enough then to put real effort into going there.
That point is that we will NEVER do that without a destination. Finding one is the first step and even without going it's worthwhile.
I can easily envisiion a situation where an entire moon is plunged into shadow as it orbits a gas giant. This would, I presume, cause temperatures to fall for the duration of the eclipse, and if it lasted too long, I can imagine that such a regular occurrence would likely make the moon inhospitable to life as we know it, even if it is the right distance from the sun to support liquid water, and even if it had an appropriate gravitational pull and atmosphere.
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Why not a generation ship? We are probably on 50-60 years from being able to build a generation ship, if we can handle the sociology. Perhaps up to a century. It's not clear that we'll *EVER* be able to do it in any other way.
If you're in a hurry, you were already born too soon.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
Probably between one and several hours. Half the moon might have an extra long night every month, but the planet would retain enough heat that it shouldn't threaten the biosphere.
Well, except for the hordes of flying monsters thirsty for blood that emerge every eclipse...
How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
I imagined the eclipse lasting several days each revolution... it would be orbiting a gas-giant, which is substantially larger than the moon itself, and close enough to the gas giant that it may possibly even tidally locked to it.
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Cross your fingers that we'll find good destinations before long.
This planet's biosphere is dying. We'll soon need another one to begin killing off.
" There are probably more habitable moons around those gas giants than all the other kinds of planets put together."
Gas giants have massive radiation belts caused by their magnetosphere. Moons around a gas giant can't have life as we know it. Even going anywhere near Jupiter's space would expose an astronaut to an intense dose of radiation.
Quote: "If astronauts were able to approach the planet as close as the Voyager 1 spacecraft did, they would receive a dose of 400,000 rads, or roughly 1,000 times the lethal dose for humans." https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/s...
Priest: "Universe from nothing, no laws of physics, sped up time"+ huge discrepancies. Creationism? No. Big Bang Theory
From TFA:
Io’s ionosphere interacts with Jupiter’s magnetosphere, a layer of charged plasma that protects the planet from radiation, to create a frictional current that causes radio wave emissions.
Much like our magnetosphere on Earth protects us from radiation so too can that of a moon with an atmosphere and molten core. Mars doesn't have one and thus is hard-hit by solar radiation.
Your statement is accurate if you are talking about Earth's moon, but not correct in other cases.
Tidal effects are relative to the nearness of the orbit. Such a grandoise statement is not accurate.
This mechanism makes me wonder whether another mechanism, involving the solar wind / magnetic field and a planetary magnetic field or ionosphere, might also produce a detectable radio signature.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
I hear there's a planet called Earth that has 12 hours of darkness every day at the equator, and months of it at the poles! Clearly uninhabitable.
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In both of those situations, only *part* of the planet is in darkness for that period... what if the entire planet was?
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If you completely turned off the sun, http://www.popsci.com/node/117... says it'd take a week for the temperature to hit 0 F, a temperature at which Canadians survive.
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In our winters most plants do not need sunlight at all. They hibernate. Why wouldn't an alien plant be able to do such a thing?
Creatures do not really need sunlight all that much. Only to see and there are other solutions for that (IR sensors, sound or electric signals for example).
It'll get cold. True. But not 0K cold. The freezing of stuff gives off warmth, temporarily pausing the dropping of the temperature.
Al in all it doesn't have to be so different from our planet, assuming the average temp is similar and the radiation belt of a massive planet doesn't fry anything that tries to live and a million other things aren't all that different.
Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
You do realize this scenario happens beyond the Arctic and Antarctic circles on Earth every winter, right? Both of which have life.
Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.
Thank you... that's exactly the sort of statistics I was wondering about. So it's survivable, but probably regularly quite chilly. Basically, you'd get short period of winter like weather at least once every orbit, regardless of the actual season based on its orientation to the sun.
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And you realize that the arctic and antarctic circles do not account individually account for a very large percentage of the earth's surface that continues to receive sunlight while they are in darkness, right? The planet, as a whole, still receives heat from the sun.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
> The search for 'Pandora' has begun.
Well done. As long as I don't have to sit through the movie again...
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.