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Most Earth-like planet yet discovered
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2...fe-kepler-438b
Just a mere 470 light years away. Perfect distance from it's star and likely to be rocky. A very good candidate to have water and where there is water there may be life. Exciting questions but also depressing that none of us will be alive to know the answers. |
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Re: Most Earth-like planet yet discovered
With a travel time of 470 years at the speed of light, I don't think we're going to be around to see that unless some amazing scientific advances are made and we stop killing eachother. In fact there's no guarantee that we wouldn't set off on the journey only to find en route that the planet's not there anymore... :spin:
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special...m_the_Earth.3F ---------- Post added at 13:30 ---------- Previous post was at 13:29 ---------- Quote:
Of course I'm talking from the perspective of somebody on that ship, rather than a bystander watching it from Earth. From the latter point of view, it'd be like that Interstellar movie. More importantly though, with enough money and current technology you could probably get in your lifetime but you certainly won't be coming back. |
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I dare say you'd need pretty decent ceramic brakes to slow down from the speed of light. :)
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The way I like to think of it is light = time. It's an awkward concept but pretty amazing once you get your head around it. Imagine a flash of light, e.g. from a lightning strike, travelling outwards from Earth as a wave at the speed of light. The peak of that wave equates to not only the flash of light, but also the exact time it took place. If you were to travel with the wave at the speed of light, you would be travelling along with time itself, staying in the same moment forever, and the flash of lightning would seem to last forever. Until you hit something and die. As for brakes - that's the problem. We can't put enough fuel onto a spacecraft to make it go fast enough so we have to propel it, at least partly, from Earth. Without somebody building something at the other end to slow you down, you can't. Which is why you won't be coming back ;-) |
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