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perocity
08-24-2010, 11:04 PM
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NASA is expected to make an announcement Thursday on the progress of its Kepler spacecraft, which has been staring at one patch of space for evidence of other worlds.

The space agency has scheduled an afternoon teleconference with reporters to announce the results from Kepler, which include the "discovery of an intriguing planetary system," NASA officials said Monday.
NASA News Audio Live Streaming Here: http://www.nasa.gov/news/media/newsaudio/index.html

Richest Planetary System Discovered
Astronomers using ESO’s world-leading HARPS instrument have discovered a planetary system containing at least five planets, orbiting the Sun-like star HD 10180. The researchers also have tantalising evidence that two other planets may be present, one of which would have the lowest mass ever found. This would make the system similar to our Solar System in terms of the number of planets (seven as compared to the Solar System’s eight planets). Furthermore, the team also found evidence that the distances of the planets from their star follow a regular pattern, as also seen in our Solar System.

“We have found what is most likely the system with the most planets yet discovered,” says Christophe Lovis, lead author of the paper reporting the result. “This remarkable discovery also highlights the fact that we are now entering a new era in exoplanet research: the study of complex planetary systems and not just of individual planets. Studies of planetary motions in the new system reveal complex gravitational interactions between the planets and give us insights into the long-term evolution of the system.”

The team of astronomers used the HARPS spectrograph, attached to ESO’s 3.6-metre telescope at La Silla, Chile, for a six-year-long study of the Sun-like star HD 10180, located 127 light-years away in the southern constellation of Hydrus (the Male Water Snake). HARPS is an instrument with unrivalled measurement stability and great precision and is the world’s most successful exoplanet hunter.

Thanks to the 190 individual HARPS measurements, the astronomers detected the tiny back and forth motions of the star caused by the complex gravitational attractions from five or more planets. The five strongest signals correspond to planets with Neptune-like masses — between 13 and 25 Earth masses [1] — which orbit the star with periods ranging from about 6 to 600 days. These planets are located between 0.06 and 1.4 times the Earth–Sun distance from their central star.

“We also have good reasons to believe that two other planets are present,” says Lovis. One would be a Saturn-like planet (with a minimum mass of 65 Earth masses) orbiting in 2200 days. The other would be the least massive exoplanet ever discovered, with a mass of about 1.4 times that of the Earth. It is very close to its host star, at just 2 percent of the Earth–Sun distance. One “year” on this planet would last only 1.18 Earth-days.
Cool Video: http://www.eso.org/public/videos/eso1035f/

Toki
08-24-2010, 11:13 PM
I still can't believe we have photos of the Big Bang after it happened billions of years ago.

MickDonalds
08-24-2010, 11:21 PM
Oh man, the Aliens fanboy in me hopes they find planet LV 426 and we send a mining team out to explore it and they find a derelict spacecraft and..

Okay, never mind. I'll crawl back in my hole. :D

Devious187
08-24-2010, 11:40 PM
no such thing as the big bang.Sorry bro..

perocity
08-24-2010, 11:59 PM
Oh man, the Aliens fanboy in me hopes they find planet LV 426 and we send a mining team out to explore it and they find a derelict spacecraft and..

Okay, never mind. I'll crawl back in my hole. :D

LOL well at 127 light years away mining is going to take some time.I hope they have some news of water and hopefully in the sweet spot from the star were life could be present.

Toki
08-25-2010, 12:22 AM
no such thing as the big bang.Sorry bro..

And dinosaurs live with humans? Spare me your revisionist Christian rhetoric.

atrox6661
08-25-2010, 12:55 AM
I still can't believe we have photos of the Big Bang after it happened billions of years ago.


You know when you look at the stars in the sky you are seeing into the past infact it takes billions of years for the light to reach us so those stars may not even exisit anymore.

perocity
08-25-2010, 08:38 PM
I feel privileged to be born in a time and space were it has been possible with today's technology for us to have access to information that will one day lead us to the truth of" who we are".There is so much we do not know but there is a lot we do know about the universe and what it is. To deny yourself of this knowledge for some dogma" in my opinion " is to deny your very existence, your linage, your future..It's a shame some of us are blinded by groups who have been spoon fed religious dogma for whatever their agenda is.

Enter the afterglow...
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The afterglow, is the yellow mottling above and below the blue and white section in the center produced by the main disk of our Milky Way galaxy..


The European Space Agency's Planck Telescope was launched in May of 2009.What Planck actually sees is the afterglow produced by the Big Bang in our era. Today, the universe has cooled to 2.7° K or about 455 degrees Fahrenheit below zero! But Planck can discern minute temperature deltas of a millionth of one of those degrees using several instruments, including a super cooled detecter, making the most detailed images yet possible. And cosmologists say this is just the beginning for Planck: the 800 million dollar spacecraft is expected to produce even more detailed and compelling images of cosmic creation over the next few years.

Toki
08-25-2010, 08:41 PM
You know when you look at the stars in the sky you are seeing into the past infact it takes billions of years for the light to reach us so those stars may not even exisit anymore.

Right but it still amazes me. Dr. Michio Kaku rules.