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originally posted by: Blue Shift
originally posted by: jordan77
I've long been of this opinion. There's no limit to the possibilities, but we insist on putting limits on life.
We don't do it. Nature does. Too much heat. Too much cold. Too much radiation. A few degrees either side of a very narrow margin.
Yeah, it might not limit some forms of life we might consider "exotic" like crystal matrices or vapor creatures or energy beings, but for the most part we look at life as a structure that moves with a reason and reproduces using material from its local environment. Cold halts activity and heat destroys structure. Show me life that thrives in boiling magma or in the dark cold of interstellar space.
originally posted by: Char-Lee
a reply to: BigBrotherDarkness
I am always stunned when they see things, how do they see through all of the planets and stuff between us and the black hole in the center of the galaxy for example.
in other words, there has been no direct observation of this planet or the other 4 known to reside within this system, it is all inferred from observing how much the host star dims as the individual planets cross in front of the star and only observable for planets whose orbits happen to be perfectly aligned from the astronomers' vantage point.
this photometric method can determine the radius of a planet. If a planet crosses (transits) in front of its parent star's disk, then the observed visual brightness of the star drops a small amount. The amount the star dims depends on the relative sizes of the star and the planet.
So many details about something 490 light-years (151 pc) from the Earth. Yet the pictures on the ground from Mars are blurry.
originally posted by: crazyewok
originally posted by: Astyanax
a reply to: crazyewok
Do you feel it is improbable that these chemicals will be found on Kepler 186F?
They are common, at any rate, all over the Solar system. Here is a list of compounds that the Rosetta probe has detected in outgassing from Comet 67P/C-G, now that it's getting nearer the Sun and starting to emit volatiles:
Water
Carbon monoxide
Carbon dioxide
Ammonia
Methane
Methanol
Formaldehyde
Hydrogen sulphide
Hydrogen cyanide
Sulphur dioxide
Carbon disulphide
Fact is we don't know.
We only know about our solar system. And even then we are still far off from knowing everything.
At the end of the day we need a better telescope that can do spectrometry.
More data is needed , its as simple as that.
That's my opinion as a biologist. I don't know. I want more information.