The IAC confirms the existence of a Super-earth in the habitable zone of a Sun-like Star (www.iac.es)
from neme@lemm.ee to astronomy@mander.xyz on 28 Jan 15:11
https://lemm.ee/post/53919857

#astronomy

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WalkingOnEggshells@beehaw.org on 28 Jan 15:18 next collapse

My life for Super Earth!

rockSlayer@lemmy.world on 28 Jan 15:39 next collapse

That orbit is better described as passing through the habitable zone. How this would affect potential life, I have no clue, but it certainly isn’t a stable orbit in the habitable zone like earth or mars

knightly@pawb.social on 29 Jan 02:58 collapse

Another article said it had 6.6 times earth’s mass, and now I’m really curious about the diameter and atmospheric composition. It sounds like it’d be a big Venus that alternates between freezing and boiling.

rockSlayer@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 03:21 collapse

It sounds like an extremely interesting planet for sure, I hope they point Webb at it to get an atmospheric spectral analysis soon!

SweetCitrusBuzz@beehaw.org on 28 Jan 15:42 next collapse

Absolutely not until lifeforms on this planet have learned to look after this one first.

pageflight@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 00:45 collapse

20ly away. I guess that does qualify as “nearby,” astronomically.

themoken@startrek.website on 29 Jan 03:30 collapse

In a certain way, it does feel close. We can’t figure out how to go faster than light, but we could theoretically get to a significant fraction of c and 20 years isn’t such a long time to plan for in terms of getting a probe there to start relaying messages that take 20 years to get back.

I mean, it’s the span of a career, but people could conceivably work on the launch and live to see it return data.

LordTrychon@startrek.website on 29 Jan 04:17 collapse

Breakthrough Starshot project is working towards accelerating a probe close to 20% of C. That’s a significant fraction of C in these terms.

Even if we could get to .25 C, that would be 80 years for the probe to get there, and then 20 more for the data to come back.

But yes, that is still VERY close.