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Cosmic Census Finds Crowd Of Planets In Our Galaxy

Planets Milky Way

SETH BORENSTEIN   02/19/11 08:18 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Scientists have estimated the first cosmic census of planets in our galaxy and the numbers are astronomical: at least 50 billion planets in the Milky Way.

At least 500 million of those planets are in the not-too-hot, not-too-cold zone where life could exist. The numbers were extrapolated from the early results of NASA's planet-hunting Kepler telescope.

Kepler science chief William Borucki says scientists took the number of planets they found in the first year of searching a small part of the night sky and then made an estimate on how likely stars are to have planets. Kepler spots planets as they pass between Earth and the star it orbits.

So far Kepler has found 1,235 candidate planets, with 54 in the Goldilocks zone, where life could possibly exist. Kepler's main mission is not to examine individual worlds, but give astronomers a sense of how many planets, especially potentially habitable ones, there are likely to be in our galaxy. They would use the one-four-hundredth of the night sky that Kepler is looking at and extrapolate from there.

Borucki and colleagues figured one of two stars has planets and one of 200 stars has planets in the habitable zone, announcing these ratios Saturday at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual conference in Washington. And that's a minimum because these stars can have more than one planet and Kepler has yet to get a long enough glimpse to see planets that are further out from the star, like Earth, Borucki said.

For example, if Kepler were 1,000 light years from Earth and looking at our sun and noticed Venus passing by, there's only a one-in-eight chance that Earth would also be seen, astronomers said.

To get the estimate for the total number of planets, scientists then took the frequency observed already and applied it to the number of stars in the Milky Way.

For many years scientists figured there were 100 billion stars in the Milky Way, but last year a Yale scientist figured the number was closer to 300 billion stars.

Either way it shows that Carl Sagan was right when he talked of billions and billions of worlds, said retired NASA astronomer Steve Maran, who praised the research but wasn't part of it.

And that's just our galaxy. Scientists figure there are 100 billion galaxies.

Borucki said the new calculations lead to worlds of questions about life elsewhere in the cosmos. "The next question is why haven't they visited us?"

And the answer? "I don't know," Borucki said.

___

Online:

Kepler site: http://kepler.nasa.gov/

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tazirai
Society is not your friend.
11:26 PM on 02/22/2011
Question how'd I land on this one..... Of all the planets what made me choose Earth. lol
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissKaren
02:58 PM on 02/22/2011
If there are that many planets on which I might have landed, how did I get to this one? I think it was George Bernard Shaw who said that, if there's life on other planets, Earth is the madhouse.
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Hoonieman
Enjoy yourself; it's later than you think ..
10:09 PM on 02/22/2011
Yes, he said,"earth is the funny farm of the universe" Ole George told it like it is ;)
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sassafra
I yam what I yam and tha's all what I yam
02:13 PM on 02/22/2011
"The next question is why haven't they visited us?"

ostensibly, on their way to visit us, precluding methods of travel that fold space or utilize shortcuts entirely such as those that use wormholes, the aliens would have had to pass by the wavefront of the first radio and television shows still propagating through space at distances of 80 light years for some of the oldest broadcast television shows.
petticoat junction?
"ward i think there's something wrong with the beaver."

frankly i'm not surprised one bit no one's visited.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:32 PM on 02/22/2011
They are afraid of rabbits :)
09:10 AM on 02/22/2011
I think the universe is full of life, but ages ago, they all decided to avoid us.
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Spock
Milky Way Pedestrian
11:44 AM on 02/22/2011
Yeah, we're the Alabama of the Milky Way Galaxy.
09:58 PM on 02/22/2011
it's not that they avoid us it's that it is imposable for a living organism to travel so far of distances to communicate. even traveling at the velocity of light towards the sun will take 8 minutes and traveling to Jupiter will take roughly an hour and the nearest star (other than the sun) will be 3.8 YEARS. the speed of light is the cosmic speed limit which Physics states cannot be breached except for the expansion of spacetime itself (spacetime has 0 mas as it is the space between objects and not a thing you can hold in your hand) All objects with mass (even a single proton) cannot travel at light speed as it would require infinite energy and it would gain infinite mass also the time dilation would slow time on the ship to the point of no time movement making communication with their home world impossible as their mission would have been long forgotten as the mission control people would have gone through several generations of people even after a single day of rocket time travel
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
05:59 AM on 02/22/2011
**YAAAAWWWNWNNN** Wake me when they find one with us on it....
11:59 PM on 02/21/2011
There are only estimated to be 10>23rd power exo-planet­­s in the entire universe. That is also by orders of magnitude, a much larger number than 500 million. Thus, by putting together probabilit­­ies for only 75 of the 500 fine tuning features occurring by chance, we can calculate the probabilit­­y of the existence of a planet like Earth. This probabilit­­y is 1 chance in 10 -99.

source: Ross, H. 1998. 'Big Bang Refined by Fire'

Consider that the French mathematic­ian, Emile Borel, in his book, "Probabili­ties and Life" ('62; in chapters 2 &3), explains that any occurrence with a chance of happening that is less than one chance out of 10 to the 50th power, is an occurrence with such a slim a probabilit­y that is statistica­lly considered to be zero. Borel's Law of Chance, states that any chance smaller than that, is statistica­lly considered to be zero. Most mathematic­ians and scientists have accepted this statistica­l standard for many purposes.

Thus, the probabilit­­y estimate above shows that earth is the only inhabitabl­­e planet with life support capability by a factor 39 powers of magnitude less than what is indistingu­ishable than zero. As such­, it is pointless to continue the search for, and to perpetuate the hopeful myth of life on exo-planet­­s.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
04:25 AM on 02/22/2011
We know NOTHING! LOL
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Aleks Hunter
Keep your greedy Mitt off our country!
09:55 AM on 02/22/2011
When we truly understand that we know nothing, then we will know something.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedDogBear
03:25 PM on 02/22/2011
People who "**YAAAAWWW­NWNNN**" at serious scientific achievements as in your comment above do, I agree.
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dotmafia
boj edisni na saw 11/9
07:20 AM on 02/22/2011
and it is even more pointless to give up and not search for the truth.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NewAmericanCenturySucks
Does power corrupt? Is your nation powerful?
11:24 PM on 02/21/2011
Concerning the article's last question:

Take 500M - the estimate of planets which MIGHT support intelligent life - as given.

1. What fraction of these actually WILL develop intelligent life?

We've begun combing neighbouring planets for evidence of life. While we've found evidence of water in Mars' past, no sign of life (thusfar). I don't know what else could possibly constitute evidence, so we must speculate. We're talking about an extremely unlikely chance - measured over an extremely long time. Like the odds of rolling a one on a trillion-sided die - but we get several billion ROLLS for each star. Anywhere from 0.0001% (1 in a million) to 90% (nine in ten) seems reasonable.

2. For what fraction of a star's life is this communicative ability likely to persist?

Our star is 4.57B years old. We've been extraterrestrially communicative for 60 years, or 0.0000013% - and are poised to be destroyed by our own "intelligence". However, the average species may last 600, even 6,000 years before succumbing. Anywhere between 0.000001% (Earth) and 0.0001% (Earth times 100) seems reasonable.

These estimates produce an EXPECTED number of galactic neighbours, capable of communication RIGHT NOW:

Using pessimistic estimates:
500M x 0.0001% x 0.000001% = 0.000005, i.e. very likely NONE.

Using optimistic estimates:
500M x 90% x 0.0001% = 500.

I concede we should've bumped into one of 500 neighbours by now. However, that number rests upon extremely optimistic views - views that would need strong supporting evidence before we fuss neurotically over
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NewAmericanCenturySucks
Does power corrupt? Is your nation powerful?
12:18 AM on 02/22/2011
...why "they never call"...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
04:30 AM on 02/22/2011
Totally agree. But, I will add, that we don't really know what the universe is capable of. If we can agree that consciousness is the root of all "awareness", then, I think, we can agree that the universe is a self-aware "organism". Not unlike an ameoba. A "universe" is also finite.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
11:18 PM on 02/21/2011
I wonder if we are being watched from a distance, like someone who's quarantined :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trekbette
Bow Ties Are Cool!
10:38 PM on 02/21/2011
I feel very small and insignificant right now.
09:59 PM on 02/22/2011
the feeling goes away after a nice meal
10:27 PM on 02/21/2011
When a life form is advanced enough to travel the universe, it stays home, meditating and expanding an inner universe of possibilit­ies...and eating cheetos.
09:52 PM on 02/21/2011
First Contact: Human to Alien: Hey there nice to meet you, so do you know what the universe, life, god etc is all about ? A: Naa sorry not really, I thought you might... H: Naa total blank page over here. Both: Right, well, see you around then.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fastronaut
Something witty
09:31 PM on 02/21/2011
Chances of finding a moderate Republican out there: 0.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carachama
I'm not apt to follow blindly the lead of others
11:33 PM on 02/21/2011
Chances of finding one that is doing some probing: very high.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
04:35 AM on 02/22/2011
HAHAH Exactly...
09:12 PM on 02/21/2011
"Why haven't they visited us?".....???????
The evidence is overwhelming that 'they' HAVE visited and are HERE NOW, ready and willing to help us (lord knows we need it). Check out the amazing work being done by Dr. Steven Greer and CSETI
•Russian Navy Reveals Its Secret UFO Encounters -(July 27, 2009)

•Canada Opens UFO Files (February 15, 2009)

•Secret UFO Archives Opened in Denmark - The Danish Air Force has opened its UFO archives, providing information on over 15,000 reported extraterrestrial sightings to the public - the Copenhagen Post Online - (January 29, 2009)

•Vatican: It's OK to believe in aliens - Ariel David, AP News (May 13, 2008)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0oLJNfs_rM
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RichieB
Science is true whether you believe it or not
09:27 PM on 02/21/2011
Britain has also opened it's UFO files. Several years ago, Belgium released a video of it's airforce scrambling after a huge triangle shapped UFO that performed incredable manuvers at speeds that we cannot begin to approach. That UFO was spotted numerous times in Europe after that incident. As you stated, the evidence is overwhelming and the list goes on and on.
09:51 PM on 02/21/2011
But the evidence for UFO's is inconclusive. Lights in the night sky do not a UFO make, and daytime sightings are palor tricks revealing a mini-industry of photoshoped images. There are a low number of unexplained encounters out there that involve radar returns and multiple concurrent sightings by professional observers and these are simply unexplained. Alien origins are not at the top of the list in these explanations. What remains are genuine mysteries that are unpredictable and so far impossible to duplicate or measure. What they are is a good question. We could be looking at some kind of psychological phenomena, or even a physical life form that is unknown. And yes, it could be aliens from outer space. But there are more interesting and more likely explanations that stay right here on earth. To the alien believers, all they need to do is come up with something, anything, that offers something tangible to go on. Until then most people are going to look closer to earth for answers.
10:33 PM on 02/21/2011
Why would they bother? It costs a fortune, takes eons, and what are the results? The home planet waits centuries to find out what they probably learned another way long ago - that if we all project the information about our civilizations to all that can hears us, that nobody needs to do any travel at all. Think about that. Once we learn how to do it, we receive all this information about other worlds right here, and they learn about us.

Sure, once in a while, two civilizations are sufficiently close in time and space to make real contact, but for the most part, all we can know is about times long past, and all we can tell people about ourselves won't be known for millions, if not billions of years.

Nobody is sending astronauts to other worlds. There is a far better way.
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Hoonieman
Enjoy yourself; it's later than you think ..
10:22 PM on 02/22/2011
You're right, and they wont even have known about the delicious In 'n Out burger? Oh well... :)
09:03 PM on 02/21/2011
Just keep in mind that this is a low ball estimate based on a small sample size that also features selection bias from the type of instruments used. My guess is, there are far more planets as well as far more in the habitable zone. So the Fermi paradox remains, eerily staring us in the face.
Sandmanj
Tread gently. Mother nature is pregnant.
09:01 PM on 02/21/2011
Alien A on planet Xenon to Alien B on planet Xenon: If there are life forms on planet Earth, why haven't any of them visited us.?

Alien B: I don't know.
09:07 PM on 02/21/2011
Because they are too busy limiting their scientific research and killing each other over imaginary God's