http://www.space.com/10742-kepler-exoplanets-data.html
2/2/2011 2:04:24 PM
fuck this rock, we're picking out our new apartment now
2/2/2011 2:05:53 PM
2/2/2011 2:07:47 PM
"Potentially"
2/2/2011 2:08:25 PM
Using nuclear pulse propulsion, we could get there in 20,000 years. Where do I sign up?
2/2/2011 2:23:38 PM
Safe mode. They were trying to get rid of some spyware.
2/2/2011 2:28:10 PM
^^^^ Only one man would are give Kepler the raspberry... LONESTAR![Edited on February 2, 2011 at 2:30 PM. Reason : *]
2/2/2011 2:30:11 PM
in before smc jumps in and starts ranting about how he hates space flight and all astronauts should be burned at the stake.
2/2/2011 2:34:30 PM
2/2/2011 3:42:31 PM
2/2/2011 4:05:04 PM
correct me if im being dumb, but what does the size of the planet have to do with it being habitable? is it a gravity issue?
2/2/2011 4:07:23 PM
^yes gravity I think, but more so in terms of holding a habitable atmosphere than a person weighing more or less
2/2/2011 4:10:55 PM
If it is too small it may not have enough of a gravitational pull to support a stable atmosphere.Too big and the pull might be too much for anything to evolve into a complex lifeform.
2/2/2011 4:11:27 PM
I thought the size and density has more to do with maintaining internal pressure great enough to keep the molten metal center, thus creating a magnetosphere and allowing it to keep an atmosphere. As I understand it Mars went to shit when the core stopped (and when the Walmart shut down).
2/2/2011 4:16:26 PM
ahhhhhhi figured as much, and after typing it out i sorta figured it out too, but you guys confirmed my thoughts.thanks continue
2/2/2011 4:17:32 PM
^^Well there are a lot of reasons, that is one of the more detailed ones.
2/2/2011 4:20:58 PM
2/2/2011 7:08:29 PM
2/2/2011 7:40:55 PM
nvm[Edited on February 2, 2011 at 7:45 PM. Reason : nasa>wikipedia]
2/2/2011 7:44:30 PM
the way we're fucking up this one, we should probably be on the lookout for our new digs
2/2/2011 9:18:44 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oY59wZdCDo0I figured this would be a good thread to post this
2/4/2011 10:05:26 AM
Hey guys, I found an Earth-like planet in the habitable zone of a star just like ours!It's called Venus.I swear to God, until we get the technology to live there, we don't stand a chance of living on an exoplanet.
2/4/2011 1:16:19 PM
zing
2/4/2011 1:26:35 PM
2/4/2011 2:06:46 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Orion_(nuclear_propulsion).1c=30,000 km/sbut still, we're talking 200 years to get to Gliese 581. I totally agree that we might as well colonize venus and mars before building a generation ship that is supposed to last hundreds of years.[Edited on February 4, 2011 at 2:25 PM. Reason : asfasdf]
2/4/2011 2:25:29 PM
2/4/2011 2:45:23 PM
2/4/2011 2:55:03 PM
So let's say we do decide to colonize a planet in another solar system, and we send a ship out there, and it takes a few hundred years to get out there..If we find a faster means of transportation in those few hundred years, do you think that we as the human race woulda) Pick up the other guys on the way out there?b) Get there first and throw them a surprise party?I like to think b
2/4/2011 3:18:40 PM
I vote get there before them and pull a "Planet of the Apes" prank.
2/4/2011 3:21:37 PM
^^ This is actually strongly plausible.Relativity dictates that if you have a perfect engine, then you can get to any destination while experiencing a negligible amount of time yourself (only acceleration and deceleration, during the trip the universe is a pancake).However, I've looked at the calculations before, and in order to get to like .99c while experiencing 1g of acceleration it would take over a year. And that's assuming you have a perfect engine. So the first people to leave may be taking a generation ship or something like that.But if technology is advancing quickly, then while you're chugging through the interstellar medium like a tugboat, Earth has probably hit the technological singularity. Then they're gona be all like the Borg zippin all over the place and keeping human zoos and shit.
2/4/2011 3:42:35 PM
2/4/2011 4:26:45 PM
Realistically I see getting to even .1c in the next 300 years an impossibility.Who knows though? Maybe the Shaw-Fujikawa Slipstream Drive will be invented out of the blue and we'll discover FTL travel and totally hose Einsteinian physics.
2/4/2011 4:37:32 PM
I wonder how nuts things would be on Earth if faster than light travel were discovered tomorrow. Like how long would it take to develop a spacecraft and utilize it? That would be some crazy shit.
2/4/2011 7:39:03 PM
Y'all really should read this book. It covers a bunch of stuff about the little tiny details of space travel & how to go to & live on mars. I just finished reading it. It's really good & she's funny.
2/4/2011 7:48:26 PM
Nuclear pulse propulsionWe were closer to .9c in the 60s than we are now. Now we can't even keep the Pu stockpiles we need for nuclear batteries for robotic missions.
2/4/2011 8:12:23 PM
we can always make more of that...
2/5/2011 12:24:09 AM
2/5/2011 12:34:44 AM
Well, clearly, the existence of god is implicit
2/5/2011 1:44:39 AM
^^, I would hardly call the Earth "perfect." A vast majority of the surface area of this planet is uninhabitable for humans. Natural disasters take us out on a constant basis. I am more impressed by human resilience than I am the "perfection" of this world.
2/5/2011 9:10:36 AM
^^^what's wrong with not having tides?
2/5/2011 9:26:47 AM
^tidally locked means the same side of the planet is always facing the sun. which means one side is hot as fuck and the other is always cold.
2/5/2011 10:14:58 AM
^, ^^ Yep, think about the moon. The moon orbits the Earth, but it does not rotate about it's axis....it is tidally locked to the Earth. We always see the same side of the moon from Earth. It's a function of the gravity of two close objects with pretty complicated math, but scientists believe it's a certainty Gleise 581c is tidally locked to its STAR, Gliese 581 So you have a planet that is always day on one side and baking, then a night that hasn't seen sun for billions of years. While its being debated how hot the day side is, you can pretty much guess the day side is really really really hot and night side is hundreds of degrees below freezing. Gliese 581 isn't as large or hot as our sun, but these planets are alot closer to it.The "Terminator Zone" I mentioned is the very thin zone where the light/dark meet. That thin band would likely be the only place with temperatures moderate enough to be habitable.[Edited on February 5, 2011 at 11:03 AM. Reason : ]
2/5/2011 10:46:46 AM
20 light years is an uncomfortably in-between distance. Even a 60 year mission at much less than light speed would take vast improvements in technology, and as has been pointed out, by the time it gets there it may be obsolete. The further you are from light speed the more likely Earth is to catch you in 10 years just to tell you they don't need you anymore.But there are increasing marginal returns beyond a certain technology level. This is the level at which you both push the acceptable acceleration and approach the speed of light. Anything further than what falls outside of this distance is almost just as reachable as anything else in the universe to those aboard the craft.I might get flamed for this, but assuming the above level of technology, intergalactic travel could actually be easier. Why? Just fly out of the galactic disk and you have much less to bump into, duh.There are also definable physical limits to the "performance" of a spacecraft. E=mc2 actually dictates some limits on propellant-energy-payload ratios. Now, that doesn't mean that you couldn't constantly push the envelope closer to 1.0c by having the equivalent of a 50 gallon jug of hybrid fusion fuel and ion propellant with 1 grain of sand of payload. But this is the same problem we have with going to Mars with chemical propellants, and getting into space in the first place.If you think about it long enough, you should come back to the need for space-faring self-replicating technology. You need some kind of sustainable closed system in space before thinking about strapping a massive rocket to such a system and sending it to the furthest reaches of the universe. This you should find depressing, because at the point that such technology is mastered the need for terrestrial environments may have diminished significantly (except for human zoos), so the search for extrasolar terrestrial environments may be a purely academic pursuit.But hey, I could be wrong. Perhaps I've underestimated the cowboys in the world, willing to deep freeze themselves and arrive on an Oxygen-less planet (hey, it's got water right!).[Edited on February 5, 2011 at 12:42 PM. Reason : ]
2/5/2011 12:40:45 PM
2/5/2011 1:02:54 PM
2/5/2011 1:14:13 PM
2/5/2011 1:20:16 PM
2/5/2011 2:01:32 PM
exactly
2/5/2011 2:50:48 PM
astronomy 101/102 itt
2/5/2011 8:45:11 PM
^high school freshman Earth Science ITT
2/5/2011 11:23:15 PM