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I can't even imagine how the religious people would react. LOL

Jubee

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May 29, 2016
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Ontario
Discovery of potentially Earth-like planet Proxima b raises hopes for life - as another article called it, Earth 2.0. This is just many of thousands (3,000+) so far that are thought be like us.
https://www.newscientist.com/articl...earth-like-planet-discovered-right-next-door/

IT’S the planet we’ve all been waiting for. Earlier this month, rumours swirled that astronomers had discovered an Earth-like planet orbiting the closest star to our own, the aptly named Proxima Centauri.
Well, the planet’s real, but don’t pack your interstellar bags yet, because this alien world is probably far from homely.

The planet – Proxima b – was discovered by astronomers who spent years looking for signs of the tiny gravitational tug exerted by a planet on its star, after spotting hints of such disruption in 2013.
Proxima Centauri is 4.25 light years from Earth, making it slightly closer than the binary star system of Alpha Centauri, which the Proxima star is thought to loosely orbit.

“We’ve been excited for a long time,” says Guillem Anglada-Escudé of Queen Mary University of London, who led the discovery as part of a project called Pale Red Dot.
“We’ve been hunting for this signal and confirmation of the planet for almost four years.”

The team says the planet is likely to be 30 per cent more massive than Earth, although it could be bigger than that.
It orbits the star at a distance of 7.3 million kilometres – less than 5 per cent of the distance between Earth and the sun – making its year last just 11.2 Earth days.

You might think such a tight orbit would scorch the surface of the planet. But Proxima Centauri is a small, red dwarf star and shines much less fiercely than the sun.
Standing on the surface of the planet, you’d see the star as a dull red orb, about three times as large as the sun appears from Earth.
As a result, the planet sits in its star’s habitable zone, and its surface temperature may be right for it to host liquid water.

The planet is rocky, of a similar mass to Earth, and temperate – all conditions that are promising for life. But Proxima b isn’t a second Earth.
 

Drizzt

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Jul 24, 2012
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Discovery of potentially Earth-like planet Proxima b raises hopes for life - as another article called it, Earth 2.0. This is just many of thousands (3,000+) so far that are thought be like us.
https://www.newscientist.com/articl...earth-like-planet-discovered-right-next-door/

IT’S the planet we’ve all been waiting for. Earlier this month, rumours swirled that astronomers had discovered an Earth-like planet orbiting the closest star to our own, the aptly named Proxima Centauri.
Well, the planet’s real, but don’t pack your interstellar bags yet, because this alien world is probably far from homely.

The planet – Proxima b – was discovered by astronomers who spent years looking for signs of the tiny gravitational tug exerted by a planet on its star, after spotting hints of such disruption in 2013.
Proxima Centauri is 4.25 light years from Earth, making it slightly closer than the binary star system of Alpha Centauri, which the Proxima star is thought to loosely orbit.

“We’ve been excited for a long time,” says Guillem Anglada-Escudé of Queen Mary University of London, who led the discovery as part of a project called Pale Red Dot.
“We’ve been hunting for this signal and confirmation of the planet for almost four years.”

The team says the planet is likely to be 30 per cent more massive than Earth, although it could be bigger than that.
It orbits the star at a distance of 7.3 million kilometres – less than 5 per cent of the distance between Earth and the sun – making its year last just 11.2 Earth days.

You might think such a tight orbit would scorch the surface of the planet. But Proxima Centauri is a small, red dwarf star and shines much less fiercely than the sun.
Standing on the surface of the planet, you’d see the star as a dull red orb, about three times as large as the sun appears from Earth.
As a result, the planet sits in its star’s habitable zone, and its surface temperature may be right for it to host liquid water.

The planet is rocky, of a similar mass to Earth, and temperate – all conditions that are promising for life. But Proxima b isn’t a second Earth.
This article fails to mention that its surface is uninhabitable due to the amount of xray and ultraviolet light it is subjected to. Any life on this planet would have to be underground. While the Sun does not burn as hot as our own, the close proximity of it means that the sky would always be tinged.orange, with no blue.skies at all. Oh, and the planet doesnt rotate so half of it is always in darkness, half always in light. That part doesnt seem to matter though, as i mentioned earlier, you cant live on the surface anyway.
 

ooh-ya-more

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Aug 30, 2004
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How would religious people react? Many of us understand that there are possibly 1000's if not millions of inhabited worlds out there. The Bible never said this is the only world God created. In fact in Job it hints that there was a gathering of the sons of God and Satan showed up representing earth.
Other inhabited planets duh yeah.
 

barnacler

Well-known member
May 13, 2013
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Well, I am not religious, but there is a rebuttal:

If there is life out there why hasn't it made itself apparent? Funnily enough, this is similar to the , "If God exists, why can't we see him?" argument.

The numbers favor HUGE numbers of alien civilizations, so maybe the "life in outer space" camp should be on the DEFENSIVE rather than OFFENSIVE"

http://waitbutwhy.com/2014/05/fermi-paradox.html
 

FAST

Banned
Mar 12, 2004
10,069
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YA,...we knew that,...

How would religious people react? Many of us understand that there are possibly 1000's if not millions of inhabited worlds out there. The Bible never said this is the only world God created. In fact in Job it hints that there was a gathering of the sons of God and Satan showed up representing earth.
Other inhabited planets duh yeah.
Ask the same question 100 years ago, THAT would NOT have been the answer, for obvious religious reasons, including no mention of even the possibility of other "worlds".

FAST
 

LeeHelm

New member
Apr 14, 2002
780
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I fail to see the humor in how religious people would react to life elsewhere. Noting I know of says religious people think life is mutually exclusive to earth.

BTW as pointed out, this planet could not support intelligent life or at least how we understand it. We makes me laugh that these scientists are assuming that there are not other forms of life that can survive in almost any enviroment.
 
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