Nearest Sol-Like Star May Host Habitable Planet

JonB

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Sep 16, 2012
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Nearest Sol-Like Star May Host Habitable Planet



One of the closest stars to our own sun, and one of the most like it, has a planetary system.

A team of astronomers from Australia, Chile, the United Kingdom, and the United States has discovered that the star Tau Ceti hosts five planets, one of which has a mass about five times that of earth and sits in the planet's habitable zone. Tau Ceti is the closest star with similar characteristics to our own. The planet, as of yet unnamed, is the smallest planet yet found in the habitable zone of a star similar to ours. Steve Vogt, a coauthor of the study, said that "This discovery is in keeping with our emerging view that virtually every star has planets, and that the galaxy must have many such potentially habitable earth-sized planets." The planets were discovered using a new technique that combines observations from different instruments into a model, and then analyzes the model to detect signals much smaller than previously possible.

The primary author of the study, Miko Tuomi, said that "We pioneered new data modeling techniques by adding artificial signals to the data and testing our recovery of the signals with a variety of different approaches. This significantly improved our noise modeling techniques and increased our ability to find low-mass planets." The scientists then chose Tau Ceti as a benchmark, because Tau Ceti had no planets, but their increased finding power turned up planets anyway. Because Tau Ceti is so close and so bright, having knowledge of these planets means we might be able to study their atmospheres in the near future, said one study scientist.

The study was a collaboration between several international institutions as part of the Anglo-Australian planet search, and used spectrographs on telescopes in La Silla, Chile; Siding Spring, Australia; and Mauna Kea, Hawaii.

Source: UCSC [http://news.ucsc.edu/2012/12/tau-ceti.html]
Image: NASA

[http://www.escapistmagazine.com/content/eve/science.php]

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Mark D. Stroyer

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Apr 12, 2011
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So many great gritty sci-fi futures are opening up as legitimate possibilities!

But...FIVE TIMES the mass? Oi. That'll take some acclimating.
 

Vuliev

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Jul 19, 2011
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Mark D. Stroyer said:
So many great gritty sci-fi futures are opening up as legitimate possibilities!

But...FIVE TIMES the mass? Oi. That'll take some acclimating.
Doesn't necessarily mean that that planet is five times as dense. More likely, it's just really big.
 

ResonanceSD

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Dec 14, 2009
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Sgt. Sykes said:
Wouldn't it be seriously cool if they actually discovered life there. Any kind of life.
Xenomorphs?


In all seriousness, this is potentially great, but we won't be getting there for who knows how many centuries.
 

Quaxar

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Sep 21, 2009
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Artificial signals, eh? But what if those new planets are artificial as well!
 

Albino Boo

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ResonanceSD said:
Sgt. Sykes said:
Wouldn't it be seriously cool if they actually discovered life there. Any kind of life.
Xenomorphs?


In all seriousness, this is potentially great, but we won't be getting there for who knows how many centuries.
Its unlikely that anything beyond bacteria has evolved. The 5g means virtually all the natural compounds used to make structure will break easily. So anything large is out. Its beginning to look like that the Earth unusually low mass because this is the lowest mass planet found yet.
 

Rinshan Kaihou

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Tau ceti huh? Welp, one day in the future we will have space pirates!

http://mouretsupirates.wikia.com/wiki/Tau_Ceti_system

The planet will be named "Sea of the morningstar"
http://mouretsupirates.wikia.com/wiki/Sea_of_the_Morning_Star

Mouretsu Pirates!

 

Rinshan Kaihou

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albino boo said:
ResonanceSD said:
Sgt. Sykes said:
Wouldn't it be seriously cool if they actually discovered life there. Any kind of life.
Xenomorphs?


In all seriousness, this is potentially great, but we won't be getting there for who knows how many centuries.
Its unlikely that anything beyond bacteria has evolved. The 5g means virtually all the natural compounds used to make structure will break easily. So anything large is out. Its beginning to look like that the Earth unusually low mass because this is the lowest mass planet found yet.
5 times larger than earth =/= 5G

If it is lower density than earth, good chance that even if it's larger, gravity would still be at a tolerable level for people and structures.
 

Remus

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Nov 24, 2012
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If we eventually explore planets like this, any astronauts would have to be put through rigorous physical conditioning as well as a kind of anti-grav gel suit would be needed to not crumple into a puddle of goo upon landing.
 

Eric the Orange

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Apr 29, 2008
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rudolphna said:
5 times larger than earth =/= 5G

If it is lower density than earth, good chance that even if it's larger, gravity would still be at a tolerable level for people and structures.
I believe the article said 5 times the mass, it didn't mention it's size.
 

Albino Boo

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rudolphna said:
albino boo said:
ResonanceSD said:
Sgt. Sykes said:
Wouldn't it be seriously cool if they actually discovered life there. Any kind of life.
Xenomorphs?


In all seriousness, this is potentially great, but we won't be getting there for who knows how many centuries.
Its unlikely that anything beyond bacteria has evolved. The 5g means virtually all the natural compounds used to make structure will break easily. So anything large is out. Its beginning to look like that the Earth unusually low mass because this is the lowest mass planet found yet.
5 times larger than earth =/= 5G

If it is lower density than earth, good chance that even if it's larger, gravity would still be at a tolerable level for people and structures.
Apart from the fact its 5 times the mass not 5 times larger.
 

Albino Boo

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Diana Kingston-Gabai said:
What, no Wrath of Khan references? :)
You fail the geek test! Its Ceti alpha not Tau Ceti. For the crime of bad star trek knowledge I sentence you to watching al the star trek movies until you are word perfect.
 

Geekeric

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Apparently Tau Ceti is only 12 light years away; that means a ship could get there in 12 years travelling at the speed of light, right? Prepare for blast-off!
 

Mark D. Stroyer

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Apr 12, 2011
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To be fair, half the reason we only find big planets is because we're not quite sophisticated enough to find small planets.

There's a good joke here, I can feel it. I just...don't know what it is.

Also, it would need to be awfully non-dense for the gravity to be especially reasonable. I mean, workable, sure, but not comfortable.
 

thiosk

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I pose that earth is near the upper limit for useful planetary gravity. For example, we want a space elevator to make moving mass to orbit easier. If we lived on mars, nylon is fine, you can build a Martian space elevator with 60s tech. On earth, you need 65000 km long carbon nanotubes, essentially defect free, an then only maybe is it doable. Up the gravity, say goodbye to space elevators. On a 1.5 g world, you need a lot more gas to escape gravity, so space travel is severely hampered.
 

gphjr14

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Geekeric said:
Apparently Tau Ceti is only 12 light years away; that means a ship could get there in 12 years travelling at the speed of light, right? Prepare for blast-off!
More like prepare to die don't see us reaching those speeds ( and surviving) anytime soon...
 

1337mokro

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I think we need to carefully select the people we send over there. We don't want to create a second earth do we, where we have people to busy demanding studies about videogames whilst their country is sliding into a permanent recession.