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originally posted by: Jonjonj
a reply to: Phage
Thank you for the reply.
I get the super Jupiter idea. So they are detected by heat signatures? Ok, cool.
Regarding the Earth sized planet detection, I never said they had been detected, or never meant to, I was referring to what the article states here:
: “Our result feels to me like a glimpse into a new era of planet and star formation science. The huge number of free-floating planets at our current observational limit is giving me hope that we will discover a wealth of smaller Earth-sized planets with the E-ELT.”
How could they be detected, is the telescope going to be that good?
originally posted by: tsurfer2000h
a reply to: Jonjonj
How could they be detected, is the telescope going to be that good?
Let's hope it is...imagine the possibilities of being able to detect them, we can't get to them, but it is interesting to know they are there.
originally posted by: stormcell
originally posted by: Jonjonj
a reply to: Phage
Thank you for the reply.
I get the super Jupiter idea. So they are detected by heat signatures? Ok, cool.
Regarding the Earth sized planet detection, I never said they had been detected, or never meant to, I was referring to what the article states here:
: “Our result feels to me like a glimpse into a new era of planet and star formation science. The huge number of free-floating planets at our current observational limit is giving me hope that we will discover a wealth of smaller Earth-sized planets with the E-ELT.”
How could they be detected, is the telescope going to be that good?
Astrobiologist are building up a library of spectroscopic data sets for every organic chemical. If they find an Earth like planet they can analyse the graph of light wavelength amplitudes and match that against known molecules. So if there was the green of chlorophyll or plankton, that would be a clue.
Maybe only a smudge, but a smudge with colour, that can be processed...right?
JWST will also carry coronagraphs to enable direct imaging of exoplanets near bright stars. The image of an exoplanet would just be a spot, not a grand panorama, but by studying that spot, we can learn a great deal about it. That includes its color, differences between winter and summer, vegetation, rotation, weather...How is this done? The answer again is spectroscopy.
jwst.nasa.gov...
So when man starts looking at them for any other reason than what they were established for he has forgotten their purpose and he has to reinvent the purpose for them. Which in the end is unattainable to him.
Gen 1:14-15 ¶ And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years: And let them be for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth: and it was so.