|
If there were an Earth-like body in the area Kepler is searching, the telescope would find it, Marcy said. But it can take three years to confirm a planet's orbital path. What Kepler has confirmed so far keeps pointing to the idea that there are many other Earths. Before Kepler, those bodies were too small to be seen. Borucki this week announced the finding of five new exoplanets
-- all discovered in just the first six weeks of planet-hunting. But all those planets were too large and in the wrong place to be like Earth. When Kepler looked at 43,000 stars that are about the same size as our sun, it found that about two-thirds of them appeared to be as life-friendly and nonviolent as our nearest star. Marcy, who this week announced finding a planet just four times larger than Earth, does not like to speculate how many stars have Earth-like planets. But when pressed, he said Thursday: "70 percent of all stars have rocky planets." "If you are in the kitchen and are trying to cook up a habitable planet, we already know that in the cosmos, all the ingredients are there," he said. While astronomers at the convention are excited about exoplanets, Marcy is more skeptical, as is Jill Tarter, director of the SETI Institute, which seeks out intelligent life by monitoring for electromagnetic transmissions. They said there is still the chance that the searches can come up empty. Marcy said there is the small possibility that planets do not form easily at Earth's size, and that most are bigger. Tarter -- who was the basis for a character portrayed in the movie "Contact" by Jodie Foster
-- said: "I always worry that we talk ourselves into thinking we know more than we know." Once an Earth-like planet is found in the right place, determining if there are the ingredients for life there will pose another hurdle. It will require costly new telescopes. A massive space telescope to scan Earth-like planets for oxygen, water, carbon dioxide
-- and even faint signs of industrial emissions from civilization -- would cost about $5 billion. For now, such a high price is a budget-buster, but that could change. Cornell University astronomer Martha Haynes said: "We are at a very special moment in the history of mankind." --- On the Net: NASA's Kepler Telescope: http://kepler.nasa.gov/ NASA's Exoplanet Exploration Program: http://exep.jpl.nasa.gov/ The Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia: http://www.exoplanet.eu/ American Astronomical Society: http://aas.org/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor