Wow - 100% chance of life; how do they figure that?

Still want that ticket - only 20 light-years away.

Could stay a whole year - 37 days.  So that would be about 9 days for each 
season - WOW!

Greg S.


http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/30/100-percent-chance-for-life-on-newly-found-planet/?hpt=C2


'100 percent' chance for life on newly found planet?



Gliese 581g may be the new Earth.

A team of astronomers from the University of California and the Carnegie 
Institute of Washington say they've found a planet like ours, 20 light years 
(120 trillion miles) from Earth, where the basic conditions for life are good.

"The chances for life on this planet are 100 percent," Steven Vogt, a UC 
professor of astronomy and astrophysics says. "I have almost no doubt about it."

The planet is three times the size of Earth, but the gravity is similar.

Dr. Elizabeth Cunningham, planetarium astronomer at the Royal Observatory in 
Greenwich, says the discovery is a huge deal.

"It could have liquid water on the surface," she said. "That's the first step 
to find life."

The Gliese 581 system's orbit compared to our own solar system. The planet 
labeled G is the one scientists believe could very likely support life.

There are hundreds of known extrasolar planets that have been discovered in the 
Milky Way, but this is the first that could support life.

Earthlings won't be traveling to Gliese 581g any time soon unfortunately. 
Scientists say a spaceship traveling close to the speed of light would take 20 
years to make this journey.

But if we did - we'd find some other things familiar. The atmosphere and 
gravity are similar to Earth, and if you're from the polar regions, you'd 
definitely feel right at home. Scientists say the highest average temperature 
is about -12 degrees Celcius (10 Fahrenheit), but they point out that the 
planet doesn't have a night and day - one side continually faces the star and 
the other side faces the darkness of space. This means one side is blazing hot 
and the other freezing cold.

Gliese orbits a red dwarf star called Gliese 581. Cunningham says "it's a 
Goldilocks planet."

"It's not too hot, it's not too cold, it's just right" for water to form, 
Cunningham said.

The area is called the "Goldilocks zone."

Other planets near Gliese 581g have been discovered, but they are not habitable 
and are mainly comprised of gas. Gliese 581g, however, is a rocky planet.

It was discovered using the Keck telescope in Hawaii which has been observing 
the star Gliese 581 for 11 years.

"Keck's long-term observations of the wobble of nearby stars enabled the 
detection of this multi-planetary system," said Mario R. Perez, Keck program 
scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington.

Astronomers are excited this new planet was discovered so fast and relatively 
close by.

"I'm surprised we found one so fast," Cunningham said. "The implication is 
either we were very lucky or these planets could be relatively common."

Gliese 581g is in the constellation of Libra. While Earth takes 365 days to 
orbit our star, the sun, Gliese 581g orbits its star in 37 days.
                                          
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