A view like that would be amazing! That's a whole lot more interesting than 1 moon hehe
Man the image wont load for me, is it cause I'm outside of the US?
A view like that would be amazing! That's a whole lot more interesting than 1 moon hehe
NASA just discovered the perfect system for humanity. Our species could be established and almost all planets of that system and have short trade and travel routes between them.
Also, ""only"" 40ly wow.
Man the image wont load for me, is it cause I'm outside of the US?
Doesn't the fact that the star is smaller mean it will have a shorter lifespan? Or am I off the mark here?
Nah, I just dun goofed editing lol Should be working now I think. Also outside the US and working fine for me
Jokes aside, we'd definitely have sent an unmanned probe first and found about that long before any human got near the planet.
I assume the probability is low for any short amount of time, but if a planet has similar properties to earth, and is capable of being stable for long enough (though enough means probably near billion(s) years) I'd bet it happens eventually for all Earth like planets.
Requesting one of the exoplanets to be named Uranus.
Shame about the text.
If we can see them then maybe they can see us. Maybe they'll get to us before we get to them.
Fascinating though. Would be amazing to find actual other species that exist.
A white hole?I've never seen one before, no one has, but I'm guessing it's a while hole.
SETI didnt pick up any signals from there. But maybe they have a differet kind of technology we dont know about yet.If we can see them then maybe they can see us. Maybe they'll get to us before we get to them.
Fascinating though. Would be amazing to find actual other species that exist.
You're the real MVP.
A white hole?
They did mention in the Q&A that there is a planet in the habitable zone around Proxima Centauri which is only 4 ly away. They just don't know if its a rocky planet or what yet.Wow, exoplanet detection techniques have improved so fast!
It really is close-by, I mean, only 40 ly! It is a ridiculous distance in human terms, but it is practically our neighbor on a galactic scale. We should definitely send a probe, though I wonder if we could even receive an image with enough power to be detectable from such a distance with current technology? Then again, it would be detected like, centuries from now, so who knows.
A fun aside, if you could travel near light-speed, from your point of view, the trip could take an arbitrarily short amount of time, because of time dilation. Of course, from "outside", say, from Earth, it would still take at least 40 years. At 80% light-speed, for instance, 50 years would pass on the Earth, but only 30 for a passenger on the ship.
Wow, exoplanet detection techniques have improved so fast!
It really is close-by, I mean, only 40 ly! It is a ridiculous distance in human terms, but it is practically our neighbor on a galactic scale. We should definitely send a probe, though I wonder if we could even receive an image with enough power to be detectable from such a distance with current technology? Then again, it would be detected like, centuries from now, so who knows.
A fun aside, if you could travel near light-speed, from your point of view, the trip could take an arbitrarily short amount of time, because of time dilation. Of course, from "outside", say, from Earth, it would still take at least 40 years. At 80% light-speed, for instance, 50 years would pass on the Earth, but only 30 for a passenger on the ship.
NASA just discovered the perfect system for humanity. Our species could be established and almost all planets of that system and have short trade and travel routes between them.
Also, ""only"" 40ly wow.
We can see big ones if we blot out the star's light, and we haven't even launched James Webb yet.
Here's the HR 8799 system observed by the Gemini Planet Imager:
There are four identified planets orbiting here, read all about 'em! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HR_8799#Planetary_system
Yes it willWould it even be able to image exoplanets? I think not, but I might be wrong.
If we can see them then maybe they can see us. Maybe they'll get to us before we get to them.
Fascinating though. Would be amazing to find actual other species that exist.
This is making my hype for Mass Effect grow bigger.
Seriously, this is by far the most promising place that humanity can expand to. We should be heading there as soon as we are able, which I assume means we need more advanced space ships and maybe stasis pods, although a generational ship could work in a pinch.
Time to start building the Nauvoo.
Comparing our solar system to theirs:
Yes it will
They did mention in the Q&A that there is a planet in the habitable zone around Proxima Centauri which is only 4 ly away. They just don't know if its a rocky planet or what yet.
Eh...kind of. There's a considerably large amount of systems in the less than 40ly range so it's still pretty far away even when you account for us being locked in our own system still. It's an awesome find, but there are closer exoterra's in the goldilocks zone that would likely be first candidates for a probe. The quantity in this system is certainly going to make it one of interest once we actually break through that barrier though.
I've never seen one before, no one has, but I'm guessing it's a while hole.
Neogaf town should be by the ocean
is there a video from this event that I can watch from the beginning?
I missed the live feed
Oh definitely. I think this is by far the most exciting exoplanet discovery to date. I cant wait for this SPECULOOS and JWST to get going. They think that these planetary systems may be quite common around red dwarfs and they are by far the most abundant star types in the galaxy. Thats exciting as all hell. This basically removes any doubt in my mind that life of some form exist in our galaxy.Oh yeah, looking here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_potentially_habitable_exoplanets, there are a few other closer candidates. Still, yeah, seven small close-by planets makes this system quite unique.
I don't think it would take very long for gafville to implode Lord of the Flies style
Space.com article said that type of star lives for 3 to 4 trillion years! The system so far is dated around 500 million years. So its good.These have insane life spans
What's the radiation like at such close rotations
I don't think it would take very long for gafville to implode Lord of the Flies style