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Teh One Who Knocks
01-03-2013, 01:05 PM
By SPACE.com Staff


http://i.imgur.com/DCWjm.jpg

Our Milky Way galaxy is home to at least 100 billion alien planets, and possibly many more, a new study suggests.

"It's a staggering number, if you think about it," lead author Jonathan Swift, of Caltech in Pasadena, said in a statement. "Basically there's one of these planets per star."

Swift and his colleagues arrived at their estimate after studying a five-planet system called Kepler-32, which lies about 915 light-years from Earth. The five worlds were detected by NASA's Kepler Space Telescope, which flags the tiny brightness dips caused when exoplanets cross their star's face from the instrument's perspective.

The Kepler-32 planets orbit an M dwarf, a type of star that is smaller and cooler than our sun. M dwarfs are the most common star in the Milky Way, accouting for about 75 percent of the galaxy's 100 billion or so stars, researchers said.

Further, the five Kepler-32 worlds are similar in size to Earth and orbit quite close to their parent star, making them typical of the planets Kepler has spotted around other M dwarfs. So the Kepler-32 system should be representative of many of the galaxy's planets, scientists said. [The Strangest Alien Planets (Gallery)]

"I usually try not to call things 'Rosetta stones,' but this is as close to a Rosetta stone as anything I've seen," said co-author John Johnson, also of Caltech. "It's like unlocking a language that we're trying to understand — the language of planet formation."

Kepler can detect planetary systems only if they're oriented edge-on to the telescope; otherwise, the instrument won't observe any star-dimming planetary transits. So the researchers calculated the odds that an M-dwarf system in the Milky Way would have this orientation, then combined that with the number of such systems Kepler is able to detect to come up with their estimate of 100 billion exoplanets.

The team considered only planets orbiting close to M dwarfs; their analysis didn't include outer planets in M-dwarf systems, or any worlds circling other types of stars. So the galaxy may actually harbor many more planets than the conservative estimate implies — perhaps 200 billion, or about two per star, Swift said.

The new analysis confirms three of the five Kepler-32 planets (the other two had been confirmed previously). The Kepler-32 worlds have diameters ranging from 0.8 to 2.7 times that of Earth, and all of them orbit within 10 million miles (16 million kilometers) of their star. For comparison, Earth circles the sun at an average distance of 93 million miles (150 million km).

Because the Kepler-32 star is smaller and less luminous than our sun, the five planets are likely not as heat-blasted as their tight orbits might imply. In fact, the outermost planet in the system appears to lie in the habitable zone, a range of distances that could support the existence of liquid water on a world's system.

The new analysis also suggests that the Kepler-32 planets originally formed farther away from the star and then migrated closer in over time, researchers said.

Several pieces of evidence point toward this conclusion. For example, the team estimated that the five Kepler-32 worlds coalesced from material containing about as much mass as three Jupiters. But models suggest that this much gas and dust cannot be squeezed into the small area circumscribed by the planets' current orbits, researchers said.

"You look in detail at the architecture of this very special planetary system, and you're forced into saying these planets formed farther out and moved in," Johnson said.

The new study was published today (Jan. 2) in The Astrophysical Journal.

Teh One Who Knocks
01-03-2013, 04:27 PM
Am I the only one that when reading an article about space and the word "billions" comes up, I hear it in my head in Carl Sagan's voice? :-k

FBD
01-03-2013, 04:40 PM
I dont know what his voice sounds like :lol: I shunned Sagan after reading 2/3rds of pale blue dot, it was terrible.

imho, unless a star is born inside of a cluster or stellar nursery of sorts and subsequently ejected, i.e....so long as it forms from a protostellar disc, its simply going to have planets, no question about it.

Hal-9000
01-03-2013, 11:38 PM
yes I hear Carl's voice and yes he had some great TV and literary pieces...


I recall having an argument with some asshat at AS about the possibility of life on other planets....my stance was since we can see so little of the universe, we can't say for sure that other life forms could exist on planets.....his contention was that they would have to be exactly like us and we are alone...

ffs this solidifies my theory...in this galaxy alone :lol: We may never be able to travel that far to discover them, but that doesn't mean other life forms can't exist...

Hugh_Janus
01-04-2013, 12:52 AM
a hundred billion other planets in this galaxy.... and there are hundreds of billions of other galaxies.... there has to be something out there :lol:

Richard Cranium
01-04-2013, 01:00 AM
http://gifsoup.com/webroot/animatedgifs2/2071746_o.gif

Godfather
01-04-2013, 02:15 AM
I recall having an argument with some asshat at AS about the possibility of life on other planets....my stance was since we can see so little of the universe, we can't say for sure that ot

I think the possibility of that theory holding up went flying when we discovered life at the depths of the ocean, or when we realized the ecosystems of the arctic ocean and even arctic lakes are rich and complex. Hawking pontificated about jelly-fish like creatures that live in the clouds of gas giants and feed off electricity. I mean, that could turn out to be totally implausible and he was just throwing it out there... but based on the diversity of life on our puny little planet alone, how could you believe it wasn't more than likely that life is not far away.

But for people like that (my mother being one of them) I think it's too much for them wrap their head around... so it's easier to be a staunch skeptic.

Noilly Pratt
01-04-2013, 02:21 AM
a hundred billion other planets in this galaxy.... and there are hundreds of billions of other galaxies.... there has to be something out there :lol:

It may be life, but not as we know it. Maybe they're mole people, or speak in metaphors, or they all fit on the head of a pin.

Godfather
01-04-2013, 02:24 AM
Doesn't it just fuck with your head to think that with the age of the universe, it's fair to presume that other civilizations have been kicking around like we have for even just a few hundred or thousand more years (if not far more than that). Can you imagine what they might have accomplished... think of what a Level 3 civilization on the Kardashev scale would look like to us. Maybe we're just far too boring for them to bother with us :lol: