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New Planets!

Strange

The Texan.
http://news.yahoo.com/amateur-astronomers-discover-42-alien-planets-141707705.html

A team of amateurs has discovered evidence for 42 alien planets, including a Jupiter-size world that could potentially be habitable, by sifting through data from a NASA spacecraft.

Forty volunteers with the crowd-sourcing Planet Hunters project discovered the new planet candidates, which include 15 potentially habitable worlds and PH2 b, a Jupiter-size planet that the team confirmed to be in the habitable zone of its parent star.

This is the second time Planet Hunters project, which is overseen by Zooniverse, has confirmed a new exoplanet discovery. What's more, several candidate planets found by the project may be in the habitable zones of their parent stars. These candidates are awaiting confirmation by professional astronomers.

Researchers suggested this bonanza of planets in the so-called Goldilocks zone around a star, ahabitable zone in which conditions are liquid water to exist on a planet’s surface and potentially supportlife, could mean there is a "traffic jam" of worlds where life could exist, project officials said.
"These are planet candidates that slipped through the net, being missed by professional astronomers and rescued by volunteers in front of their web browsers,” said the University of Oxford's Chris Lintott, who helms the Zooniverse, in a statement. “It's remarkable to think that absolutely anyone can discover a planet.”

Life on an 'Avatar'-like moon

The planet PH2 b was found using data from NASA's prolific Kepler Space Telescope and confirmed with 99.9 percent confidence by observations at the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii.
Ph2 b is considered much too large to host life. However, any moons orbiting the planet could be strong candidates, astronomers said. The atmospheric temperature on the planet would range between 86 and minus 126 degrees Fahrenheit (30 and minus 88 degrees Celsius) in the habitable zone.

“Any moon around this newly discovered, Jupiter-sized planet might be habitable," stated Ji Wang, a postdoctoral researcher at Yale University. He is lead author of a paper about the discoveries, which has been submitted to the Astrophysical Journal and is available on the pre-publishing website Arxiv.
If a theoretical moon were to host life, it would likely have a rocky core, plus a greenhouse atmosphere of some sort that could have liquid water on its surface, the researchers said.

"It’s very similar to what was depicted in the movie ‘Avatar’ – the habitable moon Pandora around agiant planet, Polyphemus," Wang added.

A telltale dim

Volunteers spotted PH2 b by watching its parent star. As the planet passed in front of the star, the apparent brightness from Earth dimmed.

This is one of two commonly used techniques for finding exoplanets; the other is looking for wobbles in a star's gravityas a planet speeds around it.

Excluding PH2 b, citizen scientists recently discovered 42 planetary candidates, with 20 of those likely in their respective stars' habitable regions.

"These detections nearly double the number of gas giant planet candidates orbiting at habitable zone distances," the paper stated.

Planet Hunters includes participation from Oxford, Yale and several other institutions. Volunteers pour over data from Kepler. Once the strongest candidates are identified, professional astronomers take a look at them.

Planet Hunters has found 48 candidate planets so far. The first confirmed planet, PH1, was revealed in October 2011.

To learn how to participate in the Planet Hunters project, visit: http://www.planethunters.org/
 
Cool beans. It's awesome that amateurs are able to contribute meaningful finds.

I'm wondering if it matters though, beyond just knowing that they are out there. We are hundereds, if not thousands of years away from the technology we would need to actaully investigate these potential planets, if such a technology exists at all.

I think it is entirely possible that life exists outside of Earth, but I do not believe that there is any other sentient life. That'd get really messy for me.
 
I think it is entirely possible that life exists outside of Earth, but I do not believe that there is any other sentient life. That'd get really messy for me.
Just for the sake of discussion... if you believe in God, s/he exists outside of Earth right? And being omnipotent > sentient. :) ijs.
 
Just for the sake of discussion... if you believe in God, s/he exists outside of Earth right? And being omnipotent > sentient. :) ijs.
lols.
True, God exists outside of pretty much everything- time and space. However, as a spirit and/or eternally alive, resurrected being, I'm not sure He qualifies as a lifeform as we know it. :p

Which begs another question- even if there IS life out there, who says that it has to be life that we understand? Or can even detect?
According Orson Scott Card's hierarchy of foreigness, there could be "intelligent" life that we cannot communicate with or understand.
 
lols.
True, God exists outside of pretty much everything- time and space. However, as a spirit and/or eternally alive, resurrected being, I'm not sure He qualifies as a lifeform as we know it. :p
But aren't we created in His image? hehehe I'm just playing on your words, I know what you mean. :)
Which begs another question- even if there IS life out there, who says that it has to be life that we understand? Or can even detect?
According Orson Scott Card's hierarchy of foreigness, there could be "intelligent" life that we cannot communicate with or understand.
Good point Kel. I definitely believe in other life forms, sentient, transparent, or otherwise. Even different frequencies of existence, like radio waves... vibrating at a different level, undetected by the human eye. Beyond what our mind's limitations can even conceive.
I think it's fascinating that these new planets were discovered, yet I feel like there are an infinite amount of discoveries to be made, even here on our own planet.
 
I feel like there are an infinite amount of discoveries to be made

And that's why there being the existence of life outside of Earth is pretty damn likely. Whether or not we'll ever find it (and whether or not it's sentient or intelligent) though...
It's like throwing crap in the Mystic Forge. We might find something crazy in the next decade or go on for centuries without anything.
 
I just want to be there when the galaxy opens up and I can have my own Firefly-Class transport with a ragtag alttabme crew livin on the edge of space.

"Shiny! Let's be bad guys"
 
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