Thinking about  the previous article this idea comes to mind  :
Suppose you could "harvest" two photons from Planet X in a far away
solar system. Then smash them together and produce matter.
You would then have extraterrestrial matter, no ?
 
 

Billy
 
 
=======================================
 
 

 
 
Stanford Report, May  16, 2014  
New planet-hunting camera produces best-ever image of an alien planet,  
says Stanford physicist
An international project led by Stanford physics Professor Bruce Macintosh  
can detect Jupiter-size planets orbiting faraway stars that resemble our  
sun.
 
By Bjorn Carey  
 
Christian Marois, NRC Canada   
(http://news.stanford.edu/news/2014/may/images/13849-planet_news.jpg)  
The bright white dot is the planet Beta Pictoris b, glowing in the infrared 
 light from the heat released when it was formed 10 million years ago. The  
bright star Beta Pictoris is hidden behind a mask at the center of the  
image.

The hunt for planets in faraway solar systems has taken another step  
forward with the debut of a new planet-detecting instrument led by a Stanford  
physicist. 
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) has set a high standard for itself: The  
first image snapped by its camera produced the best-ever direct photo of a  
planet outside our solar system. 
"We've been working on the _Gemini Planet Imager_ 
(http://www.planetimager.org/)  for 10 years,"  said _Bruce  Macintosh_ 
(https://physics.stanford.edu/people/faculty/bruce-macintosh) , a Stanford 
professor of physics and the 
principal investigator  on the international planet-hunting project. "We 
finally got it operational on  the telescope last November and it worked 
beautifully right out of the  box." 
The scientists detailed the image in this week's publication of the 
_Proceedings  of the National Academy of Sciences_ 
(http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2014/05/08/1304215111.abstract?sid=44c40306-5e0f-4d4d-ad9f-eb66d0d66a73)
 
. 
The photo of Beta Pictoris b – as the planet is known – is more impressive 
 considering that the planet is more than 63 light-years away from Earth. 
The  planet is visible in a single 60-second exposure; with previous 
instruments it  would have taken an hour. The combined GPI dataset revealed 
important details  of the planet's orbit and axis and its relationship to a 
nearby 
asteroid  belt. 
It also allowed Macintosh's team to predict that in 2017 the planet may  
"transit" – pass directly in front of its parent star. Although the _Kepler  
mission_ (http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/kepler/overview/#.U3UyZS_1tE4)  
has discovered thousands of transiting planets, none has been  directly seen. 
Direct observation of a planet as it transits its star would  allow the 
planet to be studied in unprecedented detail. 
Only a handful of planets have been directly imaged since construction  
began in 2004 on the GPI – a ground-based instrument at the Gemini South  
Telescope in Chile. The previous generation of adaptive optics, however, was  
only sensitive enough to observe planets that were much larger than Jupiter –  
three to 10 times Jupiter's mass – and only planets that were as far away 
from  their stars as Saturn or Neptune is from our sun. 
The GPI's advanced optics are tuned to detect faint planets orbiting very  
bright stars. This makes it possible to detect Jupiter-size planets orbiting 
 closer to stars that are more like our own. Macintosh estimates that his 
team  could be able to discover and characterize 20 to 50 planets. 
"To some extent this is really the old  
looking-for-the-keys-under-the-searchlight joke," Macintosh said. "We look  
around bright nearby stars because 
we need the stars to be bright for GPI to  work. But stars that are bright 
and close let you get lots more photons from  the star and planet, and you 
can do a better job of understanding the  planet." 
The sensitive camera will be able to precisely measure the planet's  
temperature and chemical composition, which will allow for computer models of  
the 
atmosphere and climate to become much more exact. This information could  
then yield clues as to how the planet formed. 
Unfortunately, the GPI won't be able to spot Earth-like planets; they're  
too small, and thus won't reflect enough light to be detected. 
"But it's a step on the road," Macintosh said. "Some day a future space  
telescope will use the same technology, and be able to see an Earth around one 
 of these nearby stars."




-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to