This was quite an interesting read!
[quote]Astronomers have discovered what appears to be the oldest known alien world that could be capable of supporting life, and it's just a stone's throw away from Earth.
The newfound exoplanet candidate Kapteyn b, which lies a mere 13 light-years away, is about 11.5 billion years old, scientists say. That makes it 2.5 times older than Earth, and just 2 billion years or so younger than the universe itself, which burst into existence with the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago.
Kapteyn b PHL @ UPR Arecibo, Aladin Sky Atlas
Artistic representation of the potentially habitable world Kapteyn b with the globular cluster Omega Centauri in the background.
"It does make you wonder what kind of life could have evolved on those planets over such a long time," study lead author Guillem Anglada-Escude, of Queen Mary University of London, said in a statement.
Anglada-Escude was referring to Kapteyn b and its newly discovered sister world, Kapteyn c, which both orbit a nearby red dwarf known as Kapteyn's Star. But only Kapteyn b, a "super-Earth" about five times as massive as our own planet, is thought to be potentially habitable; the larger Kapteyn c is likely too cold, researchers said.
The astronomers spotted both alien planets by noting the tiny wobbles their gravitational tugs induced in the motion of Kapteyn's Star. These tugs caused shifts in the star's light, which were first detected using the HARPS spectrometer at the European Southern Observatory's La Silla Observatory in Chile.
The team didn't expect to find a possibly habitable world around Kapteyn's Star, which is one-third as massive as the sun but so close to Earth that it's visible in amateur telescopes, in the southern constellation of Pictor.
"We were surprised to find planets orbiting Kapteyn's Star," Anglada-Escude said. "Previous data showed some moderate excess of variability, so we were looking for very short-period planets when the new signals showed up loud and clear."
Kapteyn b lies in the star's habitable zone, the range of distances that could support liquid water — and thus, perhaps, life as we know it — on a world's surface. The exoplanet completes one orbit every 48 days. The colder Kapteyn c is much farther out, circling the star once every 121 days.
- Mike Wall, Space.com [/quote]
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Inb4thecovenantattacks
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[quote]just a stone's throw away from Earth.[/quote] [quote] mere 13 light-years away,[/quote]
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Get my cryo-pod ready, I'm leaving in 20.
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Waaaaaaaaaaaaaa we'll never get there.
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[quote]13 million light years away.[/quote] Yep, sounds like a good jogging distance, better set up google maps.
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[quote]mere 13 light-years away,[/quote] ARE YOU SHITIN ME
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Space, the only thing that can make you feel fear and excitement at the same time.
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You know NASA has a warp drive? The catch though is it releases a massive amount of radiation and a ridiculous requirement for fuel.
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And we will never go there so who the hell cares?
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The system also has like 14% the metallicity of our own. Don't get too excited.
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Definitely cool but not at all likely to support life. Check out this article. What it basically says is this: there is a certain type of star we have been searching for earth-like exoplanets (red dwarf stars). Those stars aren't as hot as the ones like our sun, so if life is to exist on a planet circling a red dwarf, it has to be fairly close to the star (close enough to where liquid water can still be found). The amount of solar activity around a red dwarf would ruin the planet's atmosphere taking away pretty much any chance for finding life on those planets. This report just came out though, so I'm not sure if it's been peer reviewed or anything like that So basically our chances of finding life just got a whole hell of a lot smaller because red dwarf stars are like 80 percent of all known stars according to this article (I actually thought it was 85 percent). On a positive note this might increase our chances of survival as a species in the long term. [url=http://www.example.com]http://waitbutwhy.com/2014/05/fermi-paradox.html [/url] This is a really cool article talking about the Fermi Paradox, which basically discusses the question "where is everbody?". It breaks it down pretty easily so it isn't hard to read even if you aren't too science minded
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Cool. We need to start working harder on space exploration, super-fast rockets, faster-than-light travel, etc., if we want to get there in less than one lifetime, though.
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Time to get ye ol' FTL drive out.
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FTL FTL FTL FTL FTL FTL FTL FTL
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They say this as if Sangheilios isn't known to them. [spoiler]some fiction *cringes*[/spoiler]
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I want to know how they can tell how old it is. Does it give of a specific radiation wave length or something?
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Science!
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Yay more stuff to make me depressed
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I wonder do we know of any planet or thing large enough to be a planet that doesnt orbit a star?
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I really hope we have good space travel by the time I die.
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Edited by inb4200replies: 6/5/2014 4:14:39 AMI'm no expert but since it's 13 light years away, isn't that what we're seeing right now? Something 13 years in the past?
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I like how it made 13 lightyears seem like a small distance. It may be compared to other exo planets we have found but it is still a massive distance.
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[quote]a mere 13 light-years away[/quote] Oh, good. Walking distance.
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If you don't love space there's something wrong with you
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13 light years? Lol
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Edited by xurs cheeky bag: 6/5/2014 12:20:58 AMITT: People who don't understand spacial terms. 13 light-years is very close in the grand-scheme of things. IMO, the coolest part about this is how old it is. Because of it's age, it's entirely possible that life could have evolved, achieved civilization, and wiped itself out before life on Earth even existed.