Bizarre Dwarf Planet Wrapped in Ice Blanket
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
| Radioactivity and gravity may be why the strange football-shaped dwarf planet known as Haumea and its moons are unexpectedly sheathed in crystalline ice, shining in space, researchers suggest. Haumea, named after the Hawaiian goddess of childbirth, orbits the sun beyond the path of Neptune, with two moons in orbit around it named Hi'iaka and Namaka, two of the deity's daughters. Haumea is a bizarre dwarf planet world shaped like a cigar, or perhaps an American football, measuring about 1,200 miles (2,000 kilometers) long, and makes one full rotation in less than four hours. This is one of the fastest rotation... |
Who Needs a Moon?
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
BOSTONThe number of Earth-like extrasolar planets suitable for harboring advanced life could be 10 times higher than has been assumed until now, according to a new modeling study. The finding contradicts the prevailing notion that a terrestrial planet needs a large moon to stabilize the orientation of its axis and, hence, its climate. In 1993, French mathematicians Jacques Laskar and Philippe Robutel showed that Earths large moon has a stabilizing effect on our planets climate. Without the moon, gravitational perturbations from other planets, notably nearby Venus and massive Jupiter, would greatly disturb Earths axial tilt, with vast consequences for the...
'Free-floating' planets found with no star in sight
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
| An international team of astronomers claim to have found free-floating "planets" which do not seem to orbit a star.Writing in Nature, they say they have found 10 Jupiter-sized objects which they could not connect to any solar system. They also believe such objects could be as common as stars are throughout the Milky Way. The objects revealed themselves by bending the light of more distant stars, an effect called "gravitational microlensing".Objects of large enough mass can bend light, as Albert Einstein predicted. If a large object passes in front of a more distant background star, it may act as a... |
US astronomers launch search for alien life on 86 planets
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
A massive radio telescope in rural West Virginia has begun listening for signs of alien life on 86 possible Earth-like planets, US astronomers said Friday.The giant dish began this week pointing toward each of the 86 planets -- culled from a list of 1,235 possible planets identified by NASA's Kepler space telescope -- and will gather 24 hours of data on each one. "It's not absolutely certain that all of these stars have habitable planetary systems, but they're very good places to look for ET," said University of California at Berkeley graduate student Andrew Siemion. The mission is part of...
Dark matter could provide heat for starless planets
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
(PhysOrg.com) -- In a resent paper posted at arXiv.org and submitted to Astrophysical Journal, Dan Hooper and Jason Steffen, physicists at Fermilab in Illinois, present the theory that cold and dark planets, not heated by a star, could be heated by dark matter. In theory, this dark matter could produce habitable planets outside of what is known as a habitable zone. While no one knows exactly what dark matter is, it is believed to make up about 83 percent of the universe. The most accepted theory is this dark matter is made up of what are called WIMPs, or weakly...
Alien Earths 2 billion of them are out there
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
| That's scientists' latest estimate for our galaxy alone, based on Kepler data Roughly one out of every 37 to one out of every 70 sunlike stars in the sky might harbor an alien Earth, a new study reveals. These findings hint that billions of Earthlike planets might exist in our galaxy, researchers added. These new calculations are based on data from the Kepler space telescope, which in February wowed the globe by revealing more than 1,200 possible alien worlds, including 68 potentially Earth-size planets. The spacecraft does so by looking for the dimming that occurs when a world transits or... |
Astronomers Doubt Giant Planet 'Tyche' Exists In Our Solar System
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
| A duo of planetary astronomers has grabbed media attention by claiming a planet four times the size of Jupiter may be lurking in the outer solar system. They call the planet Tyche. Many astronomers, however, say it probably isn't there. The claim by John Matese and Daniel Whitmire of the University of Lousiana-Lafayette is not new: They have been making a case for Tyche since 1999, suggesting that the giant planet's presence in a far-flung region of solar system called the Oort cloud would explain the unusual orbital paths of some comets that originate there. |
Largest planet in the solar system could be about to be discovered (4x Jupiter)
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
| Scientists believe they may have found a new planet in the far reaches of the solar system, up to four times the mass of Jupiter. Its orbit would be thousands of times further from the Sun than the Earth's - which could explain why it has so far remained undiscovered. Data which could prove the existence of Tyche, a gas giant in the outer Oort Cloud, is set to be released later this year - although some believe proof has already been garnered by Nasa with its pace telescope, Wise, and is waiting to be pored over. A new world?... |
NASA spots 54 potentially life-friendly planets ("Goldilocks zone" candidates)
Tuesday 7th of February 2012 10:34:03 PM
Posted by admin / Under Planets In Astrology
WASHINGTON An orbiting NASA telescope is finding whole new worlds of possibilities in the search for alien life, including more than 50 potential planets that appear to be in the habitable zone. In just a year of peering out at a small slice of the galaxy, the Kepler telescope has spotted 1,235 possible planets outside our solar system. Amazingly, 54 of them are seemingly in the zone that could be hospitable to life that is, not too hot or too cold, Kepler chief scientist William Borucki said.



