NASA's Ames Research Center earns credit for the find, but since nobody has stepped up to lay a claim to the planet itself; I hereby claim this planet as my own. (That was easy.) Now let's hope there aren't any pesky natives to interfere with my new acquisition. Anybody want to buy a continent?
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Kepler 22b
A mere 600 light-years off lies a planet within that sweet-spot known to allow for liquid water. Since the telescope used can only detect planets with orbits directly across our plane-of-view, and we've only been able to carefully observe a handful of stars -it stands to reason that there are many more such planets. Of course this says nothing about whether there's actually any water, let alone a magnetosphere capable of sustaining an atmosphere and/or hydrosphere.
NASA's Ames Research Center earns credit for the find, but since nobody has stepped up to lay a claim to the planet itself; I hereby claim this planet as my own. (That was easy.) Now let's hope there aren't any pesky natives to interfere with my new acquisition. Anybody want to buy a continent?
NASA's Ames Research Center earns credit for the find, but since nobody has stepped up to lay a claim to the planet itself; I hereby claim this planet as my own. (That was easy.) Now let's hope there aren't any pesky natives to interfere with my new acquisition. Anybody want to buy a continent?
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