Planet found orbiting nearby Alpha Centari B |
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Message boards : Science (non-SETI) : Planet found orbiting nearby Alpha Centari B
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A group of astronomers claim to have detected an earth sized planet orbiting Alpha Centari B. If verified this would be the closest exo planet yet. | |
| ID: 1296057 · | |
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Yes! They found a planet and it's real. | |
| ID: 1296069 · | |
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But they also speculate that other cooler planets are probable in that system. As far as going there is concerned it still may as well be on the other side of the galaxy. But it's looking more like nearby stars have the right stuff for planet formation. | |
| ID: 1296081 · | |
But they also speculate that other cooler planets are probable in that system. As far as going there is concerned it still may as well be on the other side of the galaxy. But it's looking more like nearby stars have the right stuff for planet formation. You have to use your imagination right now when it comes to the cosmos. If there is another planet like Earth with oceans, atmosphere, clouds it's either nearby or very far away. It does look promising but there is so much stuff out there it's incredibly hard to detect them, very fascinating news though. | |
| ID: 1296413 · | |
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Perhaps, that planet has a habitable zone between the hot/cold regions. | |
| ID: 1296432 · | |
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I remember not so long ago that it was considered practically impossible for a binary or trinary system to have planetary bodies and that little or no possibility was given for any of the Centari stars to have planets. How quickly things change when the right tools become available. | |
| ID: 1296457 · | |
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Dr. Shostak, at the SETI Institute, says they are considering scanning Alpha Centauri with the Allen Telescope Array. They have been looking at the planets turned up by the Kepler Space Telescope. These planets are at an average distance of about 2250 light years. A signal of the same intrinsic power from Alpha Centauri B would typically appear several hundred thousand times stronger than from one these more distant planets, due to the comparatively negligible distance of Alpha Centauri. | |
| ID: 1296530 · | |
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No one caught my error, I see. The Allen Telescope array is too far North for Alpha Centauri to be visible to it. I assume that that Dr. Shostak meant that the SETI institute was considering using an appropriately placed radio telescope, low in the Northern hemisphere, or in the Southern hemisphere to examine Alpha Centauri. | |
| ID: 1296700 · | |
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The absolute best place to have a radio telescope in operation, from earth's point of view, is the far side of our moon. Virtually no chance of a stray signal from earth getting picked up. It sweeps the entire sky once every 28+ days. It would also be a great place for an optical telescope as there is no atmosphere to compensate for. But it doesn't look like trips back to the moon are likely anytime soon. | |
| ID: 1296832 · | |
The absolute best place to have a radio telescope in operation, from earth's point of view, is the far side of our moon. Virtually no chance of a stray signal from earth getting picked up. It sweeps the entire sky once every 28+ days. It would also be a great place for an optical telescope as there is no atmosphere to compensate for. But it doesn't look like trips back to the moon are likely anytime soon. That's an old idea that keeps on popping up. Unfortunately, the moon would be a logistics nightmare. Also, electrostatic dust and extreme temperature swings are just two irksome problems... Better and easier is put an array way out in orbit at one of the Lagrange points or even beyond. Keep searchin', Martin ____________ Mandriva Linux A user friendly OS! See new freedom Mageia2 The Future is what We make IT (GPLv3) | |
| ID: 1296877 · | |
Message boards : Science (non-SETI) : Planet found orbiting nearby Alpha Centari B
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