Sign up for free Newsletters

Once a month get new photos and expert tips.

Sign Up

Search Results

Results tagged “earth” from Breaking Orbit

Ever since Pluto got voted off the island, most astronomers have defined a planet as a body orbiting a star—dead or alive—that is a) massive enough to be rounded by its own gravity, b) not massive enough to ignite itself into starhood, and c) domineering enough to have swept its neighborhood clean of smaller planetary seedlings.

Phew, what a mouthful!

But as we know from our own solar system, not all planets are created equal, and things get really interesting when we try to define the types of planets that might support life.

Traditionally when we think of a habitable world, we think of Earth. Makes sense: To date it's our only frame of reference for a planet that supports plants, animals, even microbes. So it's as good a model as any in terms of what we'd want habitable exoplanets to look like.

kilimanjaro.jpg

A 3-D view of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, compiled from satellite data
—Image courtesy NASA/JPL/NIMA

Hence the huge emphasis among planet hunters on the so-called Goldilocks Zone, where it's not too hot and not too cold. A planet inside this zone would be just right for liquid water and life-giving sunshine.

In recent years that hypothetical zone has been getting bigger, it seems, especially as expeditions to the deep ocean and volcanic peaks have expanded the conditions in which we thought life could exist.

Enter Rory Barnes, a University of Washington postdoctoral researcher who's here to rain on that parade.

► Read This Entire Post

Of the more than 300 planets circling other stars we've found so far, only a handful have ever had their pictures taken directly.

Astronomers strongly suspect the vast majority of these so-called exoplanets exist based solely on indirect evidence, such as their gravitational effects on stars.

So the trick, then, is figuring out anything else about those planets beyond the fact that they're there.

Is a given exoplanet the size of Jupiter or Mars? What's it made of, and what's in its atmosphere? And perhaps the most exciting question, is there liquid water?

Enric Pallé, of Spain's Astrophysics Institute of the Canaries, and colleagues figured the best way to answer some of these questions would be to look no farther than home.

earthshine.jpg

—Image courtesy Gabriel Perez Diaz/Nature

What's more, the researchers decided to advance the frontiers of 21st-century astronomy using one of the oldest known astrophysical tools: a lunar eclipse.

► Read This Entire Post

All eyes swiveled toward me when the tie-breaker question was asked at last week's pub quiz: How many times Earth's mass is that of Uranus? [insert suppressed giggle here]

Think you know? Think carefully. This is pub quiz after all, not Jeopardy—who's to say the question writers knew the difference between size and mass?

On one hand, gas giant Uranus is definitely bigger than Earth, so logically it must be more massive. But wait, all that gas means it's probably lighter than our rock-filled home, so maybe it's less massive? And hey, I know Saturn's bigger than Uranus, and I heard it's got such a low density that it would float in a cosmic-size bathtub!

Here are the facts. Mass is a measure of how much matter an object contains. Period. Mass is the same no matter the size of a thing.


Neutron stars
, for example, are relatively small, on average about 12.5 miles (20 kilometers) across. But they pack in the same mass as one and a half sunlike stars.

uranus-earth.jpg

Uranus is bigger than Earth, coming in at 31,763 miles (51,118 kilometers) across at its equator. That's almost four times bigger than our planet's 7,926-mile (12,756-kilometer) diameter.

Meanwhile, the amusingly named gas giant has a mass that's 14.5 times that of Earth.

By contrast, Uranus' neighbor Neptune is slightly smaller than it in size—with an equatorial diameter of 30,778 miles (49,532 kilometers)—but it's 17 times as massive as Earth.

Knowing mass is important, as it determines the values for weight (mass times gravity) and density (mass over volume). [For a lark, enter your Earthly pounds in this planetary weight calculator to see what you'd weigh on some of the other planets and moons in the solar system.]

Combining data about mass and size can tell us whether a planet outside the solar system is more likely to be gassy (bigger like Neptune) or rocky (smaller like Earth).

For the record, the pub quiz writers knew their stuff: The answer to the tie-breaker was 14.5.

It turned out to be a moot point, though, as no teams wound up tied after the final round. So I'll just leave it a mystery whether our team got it right!

Sometimes it's possible to be too close to a problem. For example, how would a citizen of Whoville living on a speck of dust know what another speck of dust several light-years away is supposed to look like?

The situation is much the same on Earth.

earth-mars.jpg

Earth, as seen from Mars in 2004
—Image courtesy NASA/JPL/Cornell/Texas A&M

So far we've found more than 300 examples of specks in the distant universe that we have good reason to believe are planets circling other stars—so-called extrasolar planets, or exoplanets.

Almost all of these specks are too far away and/or too small to see directly. But we know they're there, because we can see the gravitational tugs they make on their host stars, or we see a star dim for a bit as a planet passes between it and us.

With current technology, we can tell that quite a few of the worlds we see outside the solar system look a lot like Jupiter, with relatively similar masses, densities, and compositions, but often much closer to their stars than would be expected.

Not long after we spotted the first "hot Jupiter," we found the first exoplanet that looks like it might be a rocky world like Earth, raising hopes that there's at least one distant orb out there that could be habitable for life as we know it.

The problem is, the only habitable world we know of is Earth, and how do we know what Earth looks like from veeeeeery far away?

—Video courtesy NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington

Luckily, a few of the orbiters we've sent out to examine the solar system's other denizens are being asked to shoot a few glances back home and give us a better picture of what we should be looking for when scanning the skies for other Earths.

► Read This Entire Post

Ich Liebe Planeten

Posted on September 22, 2008 | 0 Comments

Germany takes on the worlds this week, as the 3rd European Planetary Science Congress gets underway in Münster.

Today's cornucopia included a presentation from Gerhard Schmidt of the University of Mainz, who says that platinum rings come from outer space.

More precisely, the idea is that platinum, gold, and other precious "iron-loving" metals were stripped from the planet's superheated self as Earth formed, but then were delivered back to the exterior layers by asteroid impacts once things cooled down a bit.

asteroid-jewel.jpg

The stony asteroid Kleopatra
—courtesy NASA

Schmidt was prompted to investigate the matter because the ratios of iron-loving metals in Earth's mantle are not quite in line with their abundances in meteorites known as chondrites—stony chunks of space rock thought to represent pristine material from the birth of the solar system.

His team calculates that 160 asteroids each about 12 miles (20 kilometers) across smashed into Earth roughly 20 to 30 million years after the core formed, depositing the metals in question onto our young planet.

The glitch with this theory is that even after 12 years of studying impact craters on Earth, along with bits of earthly, lunar, and Martian rock from impact sites, Schmidt and co. can't exactly match any known meteorites to the metal ratios found in Earth's mantle.

What's more, asteroids that might have the necessary ratios are predicted to come from the space between Mercury and Venus, but no known meteorites from this region have ever been found.

Still, it's an intriguing hypothesis, especially for someone like me who is always looking for the next geeky but decorative conversation piece.

About This Blog

The moon
From dwarf planets to hot Jupiters, join NatGeo News space and tech editor Victoria Jaggard in a global discussion about all things extraterrestrial.


news.nationalgeographic.com

Share This

Add to Technorati Favorites
 

Subscribe to This Blog

Get the RSS feed for this blog—and don't miss a single word.

RSS     What is RSS?

Blogroll