Potentially inhabitable super-Earth discovered in 6 planet solar system

Potentially inhabitable superEarth discovered in 6 planet solar system

When we do eventually reduce the Earth to an uninhabitable wasteland through our careless consumption of natural resources and inevitable nuclear wars, we’ll need someplace else to go. We haven’t picked a successor yet, but a new candidate has been identified a mere 44 light years away, orbiting dwarf star HD 40307. The super-Earth orbits its host star right at the edge of the so-called habitable zone, where a stable atmosphere and liquid water are possible. We don’t know for sure the planet is, in fact, capable of supporting life, but there’s at least a chance. And given that it’s roughly seven-times the mass of Earth, it shouldn’t have much trouble playing host to our exploding population.

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Potentially inhabitable super-Earth discovered in 6 planet solar system originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Nov 2012 10:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mars Attacks! Christmas Ornament: Just Don’t Yodel Near It

My favorite part of Tim Burton’s cult classic Mars Attacks! (besides every scene with Jack Nicholson in it) is the part where grandma’s Indian Love Call yodeling record is discovered to be the Achilles’ heel of the invaders, blowing their heads to smithereens. I always felt my head about to explode whenever that Slim Whitman commercial came on the TV too. Now you can have a constant reminder of those giant-craniumed aliens hanging on your Christmas tree.

mars attacks christmas ornament

Collectibles company Gentle Giant created this detailed, limited-edition holiday ornament based on the movie aliens, but also in tribute to the 50th anniversary of the Topps Mars Attacks trading cards which inspired Burton’s flick.

You can order the Mars Attacks! alien ornament over at Urban Collector now for $40.99(USD). It’s supposed to ship in 3 to 4 weeks, so you should have it in time for the holidays. Slim Whitman record sold separately.

[via GeekAlerts]


Watch a NASA Astronaut Describe the Complexities of Photography in Space

Donald Pettit is, as well as being a NASA astronaut, an exceptionally keen photographer—which is why he has over 10 top-of-line DSLR cameras littering the International Space Station. In this video, he talks about the complexities, and joys, of photography in space. More »

How Astronauts Vote from Space

NASA Astronauts, who are true American heroes, aboard the ISS can vote in the presidential election tomorrow too. How? It’s not like there are any polling stations near them. Well, it’s sort of like an absentee ballot but obviously different because it’s from FREAKING SPACE. More »

Here’s What the Hurricane Sandy Blackout Looked Like From Space

Hurricane Sandy flipped off the power for literally millions of people in the Northeast. The thought alone is crazy, but its even more staggering when you see what it looked like from space. More »

Star Citizen can’t be run on current-gen consoles, says developer

Star Citizen, the upcoming space-based MMO being developed by Roberts Space Industries, will only be releasing for the PC. This might seem like a suicide move since console game sales have always been dominating the market over PC game sales, but the lead developer and designer Chris Roberts says there’s a reason that they’re releasing the game on only the PC platform.

Essentially, Roberts says that the hardware requirements for Star Citizen exceeds that of current-generation consoles like the Xbox 360 and the PlayStation 3. He also claims that high-end PCs today are “already more powerful than what a next-generation console is going to be.” Roberts is aiming high with the hardware requirements for Star Citizen, but he expects them to be standard for a PC when the game releases in two years or so.

While Roberts doesn’t disclose what the hardware requirements might be for Star Citizen, he mentions that if he’s developing a PC game, users are going to need at least 4GB of RAM in their machines, and while his games wouldn’t use up all 4GB (because Windows needs some allocated for itself), he says that they’ll require a lot more than the 512MB of RAM that most current-gen consoles run on.

Roberts also slightly disses other game developers who port their console games to PC. He says that “if someone is making a game for a console first, and it’s being ported to the PC, [he’s] always buying it for the console.” However, he goes on by saying, “I don’t want a buggy port of a console game on my PC that doesn’t really show my PC off.”

[via Ars Technica]


Star Citizen can’t be run on current-gen consoles, says developer is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Super-Fast Space Travel Would Kill You in Minutes

Everyone thinks it would be cool to travel at the speed of light, which is why scientists devote their lives to working out if it would be possible and NASA is trying to develop its own warp drive. But easy, tiger: turns out super-fast space travel would be fatal. More »

Alien life could be rarer than believed warn asteroid spotters

The possibility of complex alien life elsewhere in the universe could be rarer than previously thought, researchers have warned, with asteroid belts considered near-vital for evolution-spurring proving in short supply. Although the centerpiece of disaster movies such as Deep Impact and Armageddon, asteroids are also believed to act as a catalyst to life, delivering water and chemicals to planets as well as punctuating species development through periodic impacts. That’s a fine balance to be made, however, researchers at the University of Colorado argue, and it demands a particular – and uncommonly found – type of asteroid belt to be present.

“Our study shows that only a tiny fraction of planetary systems observed to date seem to have giant planets in the right location to produce an asteroid belt of the appropriate size, offering the potential for life on a nearby rocky planet,” Rebecca Martin, lead author of the study and NASA Sagan Fellow, said of the discoveries. “Our study suggests that our solar system may be rather special.”

Contrary to the species-ending impacts asteroids are credited with in popular media, Martin’s team concluded, a reasonably well corralled field could be essential if life is ever to emerge on nearby planets. In the case of our own solar system, between Mars and Jupiter, the positioning of the millions of rocks allow water ice to remain intact, while the gravity from Jupiter itself meant the asteroids remained separate rather than coalescing into a planet.

“To have such ideal conditions you need a giant planet like Jupiter that is just outside the asteroid belt [and] that migrated a little bit, but not through the belt” Space Telescope Science Institute astronomer Mario Livio said. ”If a large planet like Jupiter migrates through the belt, it would scatter the material. If, on the other hand, a large planet did not migrate at all, that, too, is not good because the asteroid belt would be too massive. There would be so much bombardment from asteroids that life may never evolve.”

However, the number of solar systems with a giant planet sitting just outside the so-called “snow line,” is low. Of the 520 such planets outside of our solar system that Livio and Martin examined, only 19 are found in the correct position,

That doesn’t mean life outside of Earth is impossible, the researchers argue, but it does give future research a place to start looking. “Based on our scenario,” Livio concluded, “we should concentrate our efforts to look for complex life in systems that have a giant planet outside of the snow line.”

[via Space]


Alien life could be rarer than believed warn asteroid spotters is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


How to Get a Text Message Alert Whenever the ISS Passes Overhead

If you’re a lazy astronomer, the kinda person who likes gazing into the night sky but never plans ahead, good news: NASA has launched a new service which will pop you a text message or email whenever the international space station is about to pass over your place, so you can dash outside and take a look. More »

Visualized: Space Shuttle Atlantis makes its final journey, arrives at new home (video)

Visualized: Space Shuttle Atlantis makes its final journey, arrives at new home (video)

On Friday, Space Shuttle Atlantis made its final voyage, marking the last time an orbiter in America’s shuttle program would be on the move. We were on-hand during the occasion and followed Atlantis as it slowly trekked to its destination, a 90,000 square-foot exhibit building at Kennedy Space Center’s Visitor Complex. To live out the event vicariously, check out the photos below or hit the jump for the video.

Continue reading Visualized: Space Shuttle Atlantis makes its final journey, arrives at new home (video)

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Visualized: Space Shuttle Atlantis makes its final journey, arrives at new home (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 03 Nov 2012 10:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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