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Gliese 581g 'Goldilocks' Planet Could Be Just Right For Life?

First Posted: 09/30/10 01:12 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:55 PM ET

581g Goldilocks Planet

(By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP) WASHINGTON -- Astronomers say they have for the first time spotted a planet beyond our own in what is sometimes called the Goldilocks zone for life: Not too hot, not too cold. Juuuust right.

Not too far from its star, not too close. So it could contain liquid water. The planet itself is neither too big nor too small for the proper surface, gravity and atmosphere.

It's just right. Just like Earth.

"This really is the first Goldilocks planet," said co-discoverer R. Paul Butler of the Carnegie Institution of Washington.

The new planet sits smack in the middle of what astronomers refer to as the habitable zone, unlike any of the nearly 500 other planets astronomers have found outside our solar system. And it is in our galactic neighborhood, suggesting that plenty of Earth-like planets circle other stars.

Finding a planet that could potentially support life is a major step toward answering the timeless question: Are we alone?

Scientists have jumped the gun before on proclaiming that planets outside our solar system were habitable only to have them turn out to be not quite so conducive to life. But this one is so clearly in the right zone that five outside astronomers told The Associated Press it seems to be the real thing.

"This is the first one I'm truly excited about," said Penn State University's Jim Kasting. He said this planet is a "pretty prime candidate" for harboring life.

Life on other planets doesn't mean E.T. Even a simple single-cell bacteria or the equivalent of shower mold would shake perceptions about the uniqueness of life on Earth.

But there are still many unanswered questions about this strange planet. It is about three times the mass of Earth, slightly larger in width and much closer to its star – 14 million miles away versus 93 million. It's so close to its version of the sun that it orbits every 37 days. And it doesn't rotate much, so one side is almost always bright, the other dark.

Temperatures can be as hot as 160 degrees or as frigid as 25 degrees below zero, but in between – in the land of constant sunrise – it would be "shirt-sleeve weather," said co-discoverer Steven Vogt of the University of California at Santa Cruz.

It's unknown whether water actually exists on the planet, and what kind of atmosphere it has. But because conditions are ideal for liquid water, and because there always seems to be life on Earth where there is water, Vogt believes "that chances for life on this planet are 100 percent."

The astronomers' findings are being published in Astrophysical Journal and were announced by the National Science Foundation on Wednesday.

The planet circles a star called Gliese 581. It's about 120 trillion miles away, so it would take several generations for a spaceship to get there. It may seem like a long distance, but in the scheme of the vast universe, this planet is "like right in our face, right next door to us," Vogt said in an interview.

That close proximity and the way it was found so early in astronomers' search for habitable planets hints to scientists that planets like Earth are probably not that rare.

Vogt and Butler ran some calculations, with giant fudge factors built in, and figured that as much as one out of five to 10 stars in the universe have planets that are Earth-sized and in the habitable zone.

With an estimated 200 billion stars in the Milky Way galaxy, that means maybe 40 billion planets that have the potential for life, Vogt said. However, Ohio State University's Scott Gaudi cautioned that is too speculative about how common these planets are.

Vogt and Butler used ground-based telescopes to track the star's precise movements over 11 years and watch for wobbles that indicate planets are circling it. The newly discovered planet is actually the sixth found circling Gliese 581. Two looked promising for habitability for a while, another turned out to be too hot and the fifth is likely too cold. This sixth one bracketed right in the sweet spot in between, Vogt said.

With the star designated "a," its sixth planet is called Gliese 581g.

"It's not a very interesting name and it's a beautiful planet," Vogt said. Unofficially, he's named it after his wife: "I call it Zarmina's World."

The star Gliese 581 is a dwarf, about one-third the strength of our sun. Because of that, it can't be seen without a telescope from Earth, although it is in the Libra constellation, Vogt said.

But if you were standing on this new planet, you could easily see our sun, Butler said.

The low-energy dwarf star will live on for billions of years, much longer than our sun, he said. And that just increases the likelihood of life developing on the planet, the discoverers said.

"It's pretty hard to stop life once you give it the right conditions," Vogt said.

___

Online:

The National Science Foundation: http://www.nsf.gov

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/topics/universe/features/gliese_581_feature.html

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(By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP) WASHINGTON -- Astronomers say they have for the first time spotted a planet beyond our own in what is sometimes called the Goldilocks zone for life: Not too hot, not too cold.
(By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP) WASHINGTON -- Astronomers say they have for the first time spotted a planet beyond our own in what is sometimes called the Goldilocks zone for life: Not too hot, not too cold.
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08:07 PM on 10/11/2010
The general public should be more skeptical of these types of 'discoveries' by the scientific community, and the media is part of the problem why they are not...

My blog post "Why the Public should be skeptical about the newly found ‘Earth-like’ planet Gliese 581 G" may be too long to post here, but can be found at http://bit.ly/aXxzOV or http://bit.ly/aT6yuq

-H.E.Miller
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03:24 PM on 10/05/2010
What's interesting is that it's only 20 ly away. That's within the range of NASA's proposed TPF scope which will be able to gather light from planets up to 40 ly away. That light can then be spectroscopically examined for some chemical signatures of earth-like life (O2, ozone, etc).

TPF is in funding limbo right now but it's just a matter of time, probably a couple of decades, before we have much more information.
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aristippe
no more oil for war
10:51 PM on 10/03/2010
whatever, in a few hundred years we won't even need bodies
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
03:00 PM on 10/03/2010
Can we turn Gliese 581g into a penal colony and send Rush Limbaugh and Newt Gingrich there?
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indiecratublican
I am what I am.
03:38 PM on 10/03/2010
No no. If there are life forms on that planet why would we want to torture them?
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
09:40 AM on 10/03/2010
klaatu
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indiecratublican
I am what I am.
09:52 PM on 10/02/2010
Ugh! Why don't we just take care of our own planet?! I doubt there would be life there, and even if there was we should be wary of intelligent life forms like Stephen Hawking said. It'll be European colonialism all over again. Or... we'll just exploit them like we exploit everything. Yea, I'm pessimistic I know. It just annoys me that WALL-E looks more and more like our future. We're all going to be fat people who destroy our planet and move onto the next. Thanks Disney you ruined optimism for me.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
09:22 AM on 10/03/2010
Ugh? A new wonder of the universe in the making and you say Ugh?
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indiecratublican
I am what I am.
03:36 PM on 10/03/2010
No! I'm saying ugh at how people tend to look for other planets instead of trying to take care of the one they have. I'm excited for the new find. It's a huge step for us towards space exploration and such. But there are going to people who look at this to justify killing our planet. "Ugh" wasn't a response to finding the planet itself, it was more an "ugh" in regard to how some people may look at this discovery.
02:00 AM on 10/14/2010
Why, you ask. You ever hear of the phrase "putting all your eggs in one basket?" Do you have any idea how close we come ever day to a life ending world cataclysm? One piece of space rock just a bit too big, one of the suns 20,000 daily solar flares thats just a bit too strong and pointed right at us. With odds like that, its not a matter of "If" but "when" will we be in the exact wrong spot at the exact wrong time, and poof, no more human race. If we want to survive as a species, we have to take matters into our own hands and find new homes, that way, if earth gets obliterated, we have a fall back, and our race lives on.
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revko
12:59 PM on 10/02/2010
Have they opened a Starbucks there yet?
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cabrobst
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11:12 AM on 10/02/2010
There is much we do not know: it's oceans, if any; it's radiation protection, the surface might be like a microwave oven; and most importantly, how we could ever get to any extrasolar planet.
Manned space travel beyond the Moon or for long periods of time is not possible presently. Even a mission to Mars might not happen in this century for political and technical reasons. And what is 50 million miles compared to 120 trillion?
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
09:24 AM on 10/03/2010
" And what is 50 million miles compared to 120 trillion? "

Perhaps very little once we learn to warp space.
02:09 AM on 10/14/2010
True, with our current technology, we couldnt get there in the span of one lifetime. But look at what science has proven. There is a cosmic speed limit(136,000 miles per second) and only light can travel at this speed, but matter can get close to that speed(proven with our atom smasher machine). Also proven is that the closer you get to that speed limit, time for the matter traveling at this speed slows down. So a trip to a location 20 light years away, would take a bit longer than 20 years from the perspective of us waiting on earth, but the people making the trip would only notice a fraction of that time gone by. Science doesnt know exactly how much time is slowed when you approach this speed, it could cut the time in half, for 10 year trip for the party making the trip, or as much as shortening their time to 1 year from their perspective. But, say they go, 20 to 21 years to get there, stay for a year or so, and 20 to 21 years back. The come home, and its over 40 years later, but they have only aged 3 to 4 years.
08:53 PM on 10/23/2010
or by a method of cryogenic storage for larger organisms like ourselves and to take shifts once every ten years to man the shuttle on the way there. Also back in the 1920-60 i believe, there has been large scale freezes before, but all where unsuccessful but as medical research evolves, are longevity will increase and as a result are understanding of travel and physics.
and something else if we as a species know how to literally ride solar winds as a jet flys in jet-streams travel might be faster or using hitching a ride on objects such as comets or meteors and such
10:43 PM on 10/01/2010
http://www.nasa.gov/topics/universe/features/gliese_581_feature.html

For some further information.
07:02 PM on 10/01/2010
Hold on a second - somebody needs to get a hold of the Religious Right and get their take on this one. Also, Palin should be consulted before we jump to any conclusions about the possibility of life on another planet.
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12:43 AM on 10/02/2010
Gliese 581g (or "Serling") was obviously created by Him so that we could discover it and bask in His magnificence as it was 20 years ago.

Now go forth unto the internets and watcheth His show:
http://www.cbs.com/classics/the_twilight_zone/video/index.php
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revko
01:02 PM on 10/02/2010
...and go forth to take dominion over it.

(BTW this planet is a little smaller than earth so was probably created on the weekend)
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microsoap
05:45 PM on 10/01/2010
Also...

"OMG, 48x48 plots of land! My own real-life FarmVille! *starts plowing* :-)"
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microsoap
05:42 PM on 10/01/2010
First rule of society: NO JERSEY SHORE!!!!!!!!!! ;-D
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microsoap
05:39 PM on 10/01/2010
"YES WE CAN!" =D
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editor
My Two Sense
05:30 PM on 10/01/2010
Suppose the planet was overflowing with oil (unobtanium) and life. You can be sure we'd invade it; and kill off the indigenous lifeforms. At any rate; looks like the Earth is no longer so special a place....
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cabrobst
Return the top rate to 91%.
11:15 AM on 10/02/2010
Then President Palin will tell her corporate masters to go ahead and destroy the Earth while NASA begins a 20,000 year journey to the planet.
01:33 PM on 10/06/2010
This planet isn't in the bible, therefore it doesn't exsist. So sayeth Palin.
02:11 AM on 10/14/2010
If we have obtained the means to traverse the vast distance to get there, I doubt we would consider oil a valuable resource anymore.
03:31 PM on 10/01/2010
Come on James Webb telescope!! Start looking for that 'glint' from some alien oceans...