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发表于 2017-8-5 22:04:04 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
Home away from home
The existence of the most Earthlike planet yet has just been confirmed
Dec 10th 2011 | from the print edition

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memorable slogans to come out of the climate-change  talks in Durban over the past few days is: “there is no planet B”. But  what if there were? Over the past couple of decades astronomers have  logged thousands of so-called “exoplanets”—worlds which orbit stars  other than the sun. On December 5th the scientists in charge of Kepler, a  space telescope designed to look for such planets, confirmed their  instrument’s discovery of its first Earthlike world. It is dubbed,  rather unromantically, Kepler 22b.
The existence of this planet,  which circles a star 600 light-years away, in the constellation of Lyra,  had previously been suspected. Kepler, which belongs to NASA, America’s  space agency, works by observing dips in a star’s brightness as a  planet passes in front of it. It flags likely looking reductions as  “candidate planets”, of which Kepler 22b was one. But three passes are  needed to confirm a planet’s existence, and Kepler 22b has now passed  this test. Crucially, it orbits well within its star’s “Goldilocks  zone”: neither too close nor too far away for liquid water (and  therefore, perhaps, life) to exist on its surface.
It joins two  other Earthlike planets—Gliese 581d and HD 85512 b—discovered by another  instrument within the past few years. In truth, the term “Earthlike” is  a stretch. Kepler 22b has a radius 2.4 times that of Earth, and if it  is made from roughly the same stuff its surface gravity will also be  about 2.4 times as strong. But NASA’s astronomers remain unsure whether  it is predominantly gaseous, liquid or solid.
Nevertheless,  Kepler 22b is the most promising exoplanet yet found. Unlike the others,  which skirt the edges of their stars’ Goldilocks zones, Kepler 22b  orbits comfortably within its own. NASA’s researchers reckon its surface  temperature is about 22°C, compared with 15°C (at least for now) on  Earth. Its parent star is similar to the sun, again unlike those of the  other two candidates, both of which orbit cooler, dimmer stars. Indeed  Gliese 581d’s parent is a red dwarf—the tiniest stellar species. That  means its Goldilocks zone is so close to it that the planet may be  tidally locked, as the moon is to the Earth. If that were the case, one  side of Gliese 581d would be permanently lit (and heated) while the  other experienced unending darkness.
These three potentially  habitable exoplanets may soon be joined by many more. In the two and a  half years since its launch, Kepler has spotted 2,326 candidate planets.  About 650 others have been discovered by other instruments. That  plethora allows astronomers to start drawing conclusions about how  common various sorts of planets are. Of Kepler’s haul, 9% seem to be of a  similar size to Earth (though not all are in the Goldilocks zone of  their star); a further 29% are Super Earths—planets substantially larger  than Earth that are nevertheless rocky. Forty-eight of Kepler’s  unconfirmed candidates look as if they orbit within their stars’  habitable zones; of those, ten seem to be Earth-sized.
The  ultimate goal, of course, is to let astronomers make a plausible  estimate of the total number of planets in the galaxy, of the number  that could conceivably support life, and of the fraction of those that  could (at least in theory) sustain human colonists. If only a few of  Kepler’s possible Earthlike planets turn out to be real, that third  number is likely to be in the millions.
Such knowledge will mark  an historic transition, says Chris Lintott, an astronomer at Oxford  University who is giving the Kepler team a hand with the data analysis,  since the uncertainties around the question of whether life exists  elsewhere will cease to be astronomical (how many suitable planets are  there?) and become purely biological (how easy is it for life to get  going, and how easy is it for it to become intelligent?). Based on the  preliminary data, it looks as if there are numerous suitable planets.  The science of exobiology may soon cease to be an oxymoron.
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