Hi Paul,
I'm no scientist, but your thoughts on this are the same as mine. This
star is 20 light years from us, and yet we somehow deduce that a planet
going around it has "balmy temperatures". They're still trying to speculate
about possible life on Mars and it's a stones throw away from us.
Please!
Greg Lindh
----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 5:29 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Scientists find most Earth-like planet yet
> My BS detector is buzzing like crazy. "They have not directly seen the
> planet" but somehow know that it has "balmy temperatures." What necromancy
> produced that result?
>
> The composition of the atmosphere is critical to knowing the temperature
> of the planet - think Venus vs. Mars. If they didn't directly see the
> planet there is no way they can know anything about its atmosphere.
>
> Paul Swartz
>
> >European astronomers have spotted what they say is the
> >most Earth-like planet yet outside our solar system, with balmy
> >temperatures
> >that could support water and, potentially, life.
> >
> >They have not directly seen the planet, orbiting a red dwarf star called
> >Gliese
> >581. But measurements of the star suggest that a planet not much larger
> >than the
> >Earth is pulling on it, the researchers say in a letter to the editor of
> >the
> >journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.
>
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