View Full Version : (Off Topic) Could there be life on new earth like planet?
lust4ts
04-27-2007, 05:41 AM
I'm sure there will only be a limited amount of people interested in this topic, but with the discovery of this new Planet comes a new hope of answering the age old question.......................
Are we alone?
It seems as if within our Solar System we are the only inhabitable Planet; if we abide by the rules of physics and science as we know it.
With ever-changing advances in telescope technology, we now have the ability to discover and even assess new planets that exist outside of our Solar System.
Scientists tell us, this recently discovered planet that has been named Gleise 581c could actually support water, thus potentially life. The planet is said to have a surface temperature of somewhere between 0 and 40 degrees Celsius (perfect for supporting Carbon Based Life Forms).
It orbits Gliese 581 -- a diminutive "red dwarf" star located in the constellation Libra, and is estimated to be fifty percent larger than earth. Although the planet can not be actually seen yet, due to it being about 190 trillion kilometers away from Earth. More advanced technology is likely to be developed in the near future that could offer the opportunity to look for signs of life.
I find it fascinating that there is a Planet out there, that we know about, and at this very moment……some light years away could potentially have creatures very similar to us actually walking upon it’s atmosphere.
blckhaze
04-27-2007, 05:44 AM
maybe on a basic level, but not human life. too many things have to be right for another human-like life form on another planet. maybe a batceria or some sort, but nothing more complex than that.
wombat33
04-27-2007, 05:52 AM
I'm sure there will only be a limited amount of people interested in this topic, but with the discovery of this new Planet comes a new hope of answering the age old question.......................
Are we alone?
It seems as if within our Solar System we are the only inhabitable Planet; if we abide by the rules of physics and science as we know it.
With ever-changing advances in telescope technology, we now have the ability to discover and even assess new planets that exist outside of our Solar System.
Scientists tell us, this recently discovered planet that has been named Gleise 581c could actually support water, thus potentially life. The planet is said to have a surface temperature of somewhere between 0 and 40 degrees Celsius (perfect for supporting Carbon Based Life Forms).
It orbits Gliese 581 -- a diminutive "red dwarf" star located in the constellation Libra, and is estimated to be fifty percent larger than earth. Although the planet can not be actually seen yet, due to it being about 190 trillion kilometers away from Earth. More advanced technology is likely to be developed in the near future that could offer the opportunity to look for signs of life.
I find it fascinating that there is a Planet out there, that we know about, and at this very moment…….. thousands of light years away could potentially have creatures very similar to us actually walking upon it’s atmosphere.
maybe an ameba or something. If that.
alpha2117
04-27-2007, 05:57 AM
Of course there could be life. It appears likely that at one stage there may have been basic life on Mars before most of it's atmosphere bled away. I think we are pretty arrogant about our being special. Even if there is no life on Gilese 581C it's pretty certain there will be life somewhere. The question is will there be sentinent life like us. On our planet only one out of millions of species has ever really developed much in the way of tool production etc. I'd say the universe is teeming with life but that intellegent life as we know it is probably considerably more sparse.
DavidLynch
04-27-2007, 06:16 AM
There is.
tsafficianado
04-27-2007, 06:20 AM
alpha says
I'd say the universe is teeming with life but that intellegent life as we know it is probably considerably more sparse.
Here on earth too.
There was a very interesting show on Discovery Science called 'What if we had no moon', pointed out that the moon is critical in the development of life on earth....stabilizing the axis shift. Other planets in our solar system shift about pretty violently (in galactic time) and the result would be migration of the poles that would pretty much disrupt advanced life forms. The moon is receding from earth at an accelerating pace (albeit very slowly) and long before the sun swallows us the moon will escape and we will be in deep doody....at least those of us who live another 5 million years or so.
Great thread, I hope tonight I dream of planet TGirl where I am stranded with thousands of lust-filled transsexual aliens who look like tsntx and jennifer paris. Of course, as Al Bundy would say, with three breasts...You know, one on the back for when you're dancing.
Felicia Katt
04-27-2007, 06:29 AM
Just remember that you're standing on a planet that's evolving
And revolving at nine hundred miles an hour,
That's orbiting at nineteen miles a second, so it's reckoned,
A sun that is the source of all our power.
The sun and you and me and all the stars that we can see
Are moving at a million miles a day
In an outer spiral arm, at forty thousand miles an hour,
Of the galaxy we call the 'Milky Way'.
Our galaxy itself contains a hundred billion stars.
It's a hundred thousand light years side to side.
It bulges in the middle, sixteen thousand light years thick,
But out by us, it's just three thousand light years wide.
We're thirty thousand light years from galactic central point.
We go 'round every two hundred million years,
And our galaxy is only one of millions of billions
In this amazing and expanding universe.
The universe itself keeps on expanding and expanding
In all of the directions it can whizz
As fast as it can go, at the speed of light, you know,
Twelve million miles a minute, and that's the fastest speed there is.
So remember, when you're feeling very small and insecure,
How amazingly unlikely is your birth,
And pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space,
'Cause there's bugger all down here on Earth.
meow
FK
lust4ts
04-27-2007, 07:20 AM
Was this a hoax?
Damn straight it was a Hoax, just the story about how the tape was obtained is a give away.............not to mention the person who was supposed to be given the tape being a film producer.
North_of_60
04-27-2007, 07:25 AM
Some evidence...
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/technology/technology.html?in_article_id=450467&in_page_id=1965
Jupiter's moon, Titan, might just have microbial life under it's ice.
The subject of life, time, and space have always fascinated me. Good thread.
MacShreach
04-27-2007, 11:51 AM
Great thread.
Well, we have already discovered that life is incredibly opportunistic and lives in the most apparently hostile places here on earth. In fact it is looking increasingly as if life will exist wherever it possibly can, not just where the conditions are ideal.
That being the case there is almost certainly life on other planets.
Are there planets with advanced, multicellular, possibly sentient life forms?
Again, given the scale of the universe, this is likely to be the case. If there is life there will be evolution and if there is an evolutionary ladder, there are probably developed organisms. Some of them are possibly not that dissimilar to ourselves.
Deep-space planetary observation is just beginning and I can certainly remember a time when leading astronomers doubted if there even were other planets outside our solar system; it now looks as if we will discover more and more. So yes, possibly, somewhere in the universe, there are other beings out there who look up at the sky and wonder if they are alone.
Are we ever going to meet them? That is very unlikely. The sheer scale of space makes this impossible with any technology we know of. Even Gliese 581c, which is a mere 20 light years away--nothing in atromical terms-- is unthinkably far in terms of physical travel.
Think about this: we have been listening for organised radio waves for about 50 years. We have not heard any. Since any culture advanced enough to have developed deep space exploration technologies pretty much certainly has already developed radio, we can be sure that there is no such industrialised culture on a planet within 50 light years.
Now it is absolutely true that a planet say 1 million light years away (not very far in astronomical terms) might well have a super-advanced technology capable of deep-space exploration. But we would not know that because we are looking at that planet as it was 1 million years ago, probably long before it developed that technology. At the same time anyone there would be looking at an earth full of dinosaurs who do not emit radio waves so we're just another potentially life-supporting planet to them. It would be approximately 999,900 years before our first radio waves got to them and even if they sent a message immediately it would be ANOTHER 1,000,000 years before we got that.
That is a long wait.
ausbeachstyle
04-27-2007, 01:15 PM
Well wormholes should do the trick, and they're not science fiction any more.
MacShreach
04-27-2007, 01:45 PM
Well wormholes should do the trick, and they're not science fiction any more.
Hi--not trying to start anything, but where did you get that?
According to NASA
"Are wormholes real?
That is still completely unknown. Wormholes are just theoretical constructs, and we are still not sure if the theories are correct. Astronomical searchers are underway to look for evidence of wormholes, but nothing has been found."
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/glenn/research/warp/warpfaq.html#wh
and from "Foundations of Modern Cosmology"
"Are wormholes real? They are a real solution, but that doesn't mean that they exist in the universe. They do not result from the collapse of a star. They just have to be built in ab initio. There are several known weird solutions to Einstein's equations that probably don't have much to do with the real world. They are worth studying though because they provide fascinating insights into properties of the theory general relativity."
http://astsun.astro.virginia.edu/~jh8h/Foundations/
Not looking for a fight, just genuinely interested if you have more recent data.
gummi baer
04-27-2007, 03:04 PM
Well wormholes should do the trick, and they're not science fiction any more.An interesting theory...sorta like the one on spreading democracy in the middle-east. However, if you think that what is comng out of the other end of the wormhole has more than a cursory relationship to what went in this end--you go first, please. :wink:
Coroner
04-27-2007, 04:01 PM
One cannot be serious if he/she doesn´t believe that there´s life somewhere else in our galaxy and out of our galaxy. The question is, what do these life-forms look like? Are they intelligent? It can be anything, it can be a living planet, living water, something looking like a sky but alive...... it doesn´t have to look like we do what you mostly see in diverse Sci-Fi movies (2 hands, 2 legs, ears, eyes, nose etc..... but a little bit different just to be different). I´m pretty sure there are billions of chemical elements that are totally strange to us...... do they breath? Do they think or is this something else they do, something like their kind of thinking?..... I´m sure we´ll meet something in 50 years and we´ll not know that it´s a life-form (probably an intellegent one) because we´d think that it´s an object. The universe is full of surprises and some people think they know everything......
We are seriously retarded but loveable waterheads, if we think we are the most intelligent or only beings in the universe!
trish
04-28-2007, 06:57 AM
Earth is somewhere around 4.5 gigayears old. It may have "housed" life as early as 3 gigayears ago...life which is directly ancestral to us. rather than thinking of life as a collection of individual plants and animals, i like to think of life as a biochemical process analogous to fire. once it takes hold, it grows; and through the processes of mutation and selection become inevitably more complex and interesting. it seems to me that if a planet has already evolved forms similar to bacteria (which are extremely sophisticated) it's only a matter of time til mutlicellular forms follow...only a matter of time til truely remarkable survival strategies evolve...and among those strategies: conscious thought.
MacShreach
04-28-2007, 12:46 PM
i like to think of life as a biochemical process analogous to fire. once it takes hold, it grows; and through the processes of mutation and selection become inevitably more complex and interesting. it seems to me that if a planet has already evolved forms similar to bacteria (which are extremely sophisticated) it's only a matter of time til mutlicellular forms follow...only a matter of time til truely remarkable survival strategies evolve...and among those strategies: conscious thought.
I love the way you put that, Trish and your analogy to fire is a cracker. I'm sure you're right.
TJ347
04-28-2007, 01:11 PM
I have no doubt there is intelligent life out there, simply due to the infinite size of the universe. I've imagined that the first extraterrestrial beings we come across will be radically different from us... it's a sign of our limited concept of what a "being" is that makes most of us think intelligent lifeforms must be humanoid in shape and/or appearance. I mean, we've established that dolphins and whales are highly intelligent creatures, and they are certainly not humanoid in shape or appearance... It is thus easy to imagine that as that is the case for beings coming from the same planet, beings coming from other worlds will likely be significantly different in appearance to what we view as "normal". Accordingly, there is no reason why such a lifeform could not be as complex as we are, or even more so. Few of us can imagine the existence of a non-carbon based lifeform, but were everything but carbon available, would life necessarily be impossible? We can't really say, as we don't know as much about the origins of life as we like to think we do. While few want to admit it, humanity is still in its infancy, with so much we still don't know about our own physiology, let alone that of other creatures here on Earth, to say nothing of extraterrestrials. We've got a long way to go...
spooker609
04-28-2007, 01:18 PM
Wait!!! They found a substance that chemicaly is identical to Kryptonite, now they find an earth like planet orbiting a red sun.....
Baron Of Hell
04-28-2007, 05:31 PM
On our planet we have found living organisms living in conditions we once thought impossible to support life lest than 10 years ago. We have yet to see a living giant squid but dead ones keep showing up from time to time. We have yet to see all the life on our own planet. We could have intelligent life here on this planet but simply lack the means to communicate with it or the other life might fear us. Just think about it. If a whale was a 100 times smarter than a human how would it communicate with or would it. What would it do? It can't making anything, it can't travel outside the ocean, it can't say my name is flipper and point to itself.
I have no doubt there is life on other worlds. Life that is vastly different from our own and life that is close to our own.
El Nino
04-28-2007, 06:17 PM
There is TONSSSS of life in the Universe; which is only a small part of the MULTIVERSE,
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