
Extrasolar Super-Earth Gliese 1214b Might Hold Water
Might this distant planet hold water? Actually, given how close Gliese 1214b is to its parent star, any water, if it exists, would surely be in the form of steam.
In this illustration, the super-Earth Gliese 1214b is imagined passing in front of its parent star, creating a mini-eclipse that alerted humanity to its presence. Gliese 1214b, also designated GJ 1214b, has been designated a super-Earth because it is larger than the Earth.
The entire Gliese 1214 planetary system is of the closest known systems to our Sun, located only 42 light years away. The parent star, Gliese 1214 is a slightly smaller and cooler version of our Sun. Observations from the Subaru telescope in Hawaii found very little scattering of blue light from the parent star by the planet.
This appears most consistent with a planet that has a watery atmosphere -- although it is still possible that the super-Earth has clouds so thick that little of any color of light was scattered. Detecting water on exoplanets is important partly because most lifeforms on Earth need water to survive.
Image & info via APOD
Illustration Credit & License: ESO, L. Calçada
#space #ESO #universe #gliese1214b
Awesome
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ReplyDelete42 light years away. That's about 246,527,971,200,000 miles away from Earth. Traveling at 90 miles per hour it would take 312,480,000 years to get to that planet... so it is prudent to say it is unlikely anyone in the next 20, make that 2,000 years, to find any concrete evidence to refute these assertions.
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