Discover Gliese 581g - Just 20 Light-Years Away!

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In summary, a potentially habitable exoplanet named Gliese 581g has been discovered orbiting a nearby star. If confirmed, it would be the first Earth-like world found in a star's habitable zone. The planet's thick atmosphere and eccentric orbit may cause temperature variations, but it could potentially sustain liquid water on its surface. The discovery raises questions about the possibility of extraterrestrial life and potential communication with intelligent beings on this distant planet.
  • #36
D H said:
I'd be ecstatic with any life at all, let alone a rabbit.

Absolutely!

Some people seem to be saying "ah what's the big deal, they might not even have movie theatres..."

D H said:
A very stable environment could, I think, be a very bad thing for life in this case. Water vapor that falls on the dark side in the form of snow would well stay there a long time without a transport mechanism (e.g., weather). Eventually all of the water could migrate to the dark side. End result: No liquid water, no life.
Possibly. But there's likely a lot of wind.

D H said:
There are, in my mind, too many unknowns to be jumping up and down about this planet as of yet. We don't know if it has an atmosphere. If it does, we don't know it's density, clarity, and makeup. We don't know if it has water, period, let alone liquid water. We don't know if the orbit is nearly circular or not. All of these things are worthy of study because this is the best candidate found yet and because the probability of CHON-based life hinges on these unknowns.

Well, OK, it would suck if it didn't have water and an atmo - it'd be just another dead rock.

'course that would just mean we wouldn't know about any subsurface water unless and until we landed on it. Which wouldn't be anytime this century.
 
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  • #37

A planet with mass of 3.1 to 4.3 times that of the Earth and no atmosphere?

Now that is some good science fiction!
 
  • #38
Orion1 said:

A planet with mass of 3.1 to 4.3 times that of the Earth and no atmosphere?

Now that is some good science fiction!

As mentioned, it's also larger in diameter, so surface gravity is closer to 2x Earth.

Who claimed it has no atmo?
 
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  • #39
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  • #40
Orion1 said:
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OK, then I guess I don't get what your original "sceince fiction" point was, beyond: yes, if it has no atmo it won't be all that interesting.
 
  • #41
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  • #42
Orion1 said:
However, much of the material is the result of supernova residue, so I would expect that such a star system would have planets even more matter rich than Sol's system.
What makes you think that? Your own data contradicts this:
In fact, when I compare the metallicity of the two, this is in fact the case:
Sol metallicity: Z = 0.0177
Gliese 581 metallicity: [M/H] = −0.33 ± 0.12
That negative metallicity means that Gliese 581 has about a half as much metal by concentration than does the Sun.

For example, I would expect Gliese 581 g to have an atmosphere with at least twice the amount of gaseous matter and at least twice as dense
What makes you think that? This is pure speculation. The correlation between body size and atmosphere mass in our solar system is rather low. Venus is only slightly smaller than the Earth but its atmospheric mass is 93 times that of the Earth. Mars' mass is 1/10 that of the Earth but its atmospheric mass is 1/200 that of the Earth. Titan is even smaller than Mars but its atmospheric mass is 20% more than that of the Earth.

and a magnetic field to be at least equivalent to or greater than that of Earth, including the rate at which its core would have cooled despite its age.
What makes you think that? If anything, I would expect just the opposite. Metallicity of the central star is half that of the Sun, and the planet's rotation rate is 1/37 that of the Earth's rotation rate.

Until we learn more about this system, the only thing we can legitimately say about this planet's atmosphere and magnetic field is we don't know.
 
  • #43
Orion1;2911 howe 959 said:
it most certainly had an ocean as well in its geologic history, probably at least twice the volume as Earth's ocean.

I can see you suggesting why it might not be implausible that it has an ocean - but how can you possibly guess about its volume while keeping a straight face?

Orion1;2911 howe 959 said:
The Uranian system has a unique configuration among the planets because its axis of rotation is tilted sideways nearly into the plane of its revolution about the Sun, resembling a planet that is tidally locked, yet it has a complex, layered cloud structure, with water thought to make up the lowest clouds, and methane thought to make up the uppermost layer of clouds, therefore I would expect that hot solar driven winds to sweep from the hot side of the planet to the cooler side, and the cooler sided winds to sweep to the hot side of a tidally locked planet as opposed to just everything that is capable of freezing out to simply freeze completely out and condense on only one side.

If single sided freezing were the absolute case than the water vapor that composes the lower cloud bands on Uranus would have been swept to the cooler side, to simply freeze out into crystals and condense onto the surface of the cold side and remain trapped there, yet this is not the case.
[/Color]

Not sure why you're using a gas giant as a comparison to a rocky body. There is not enough surface for gas to condense on. It has to have a complex cloud structure because it's almost entirely atmo.
 
  • #44
Am I the only one that HAS heard of this planet before it was talked about on the 29th? I forget what show but it was naked science or how the universe works or something like that. One of them (I forget which) has talked about a rocky planet bigger than the Earth and closer to its star that's in the goldilocks zone around the star gliese 581.. Maybe its just another one in the goldilocks zone?
 
  • #45
Brett13 said:
Am I the only one that HAS heard of this planet before it was talked about on the 29th? I forget what show but it was naked science or how the universe works or something like that. One of them (I forget which) has talked about a rocky planet bigger than the Earth and closer to its star that's in the goldilocks zone around the star gliese 581.. Maybe its just another one in the goldilocks zone?

Yes, 581c was the big hopeful several years ago.

It's what inspired me to write my http://www.davesbrain.ca/science/gliese/index.html" [Broken].
 
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  • #46
Before we get too excited, red dwarfs have some problems. One is that many of them - perhaps half - are UV Ceti variables, also called flare stars. They have sporadic flares which are much more dangerous than solar flares - both because they are more energetic (especially in X-rays) and because their planets are closer.

Unfortunately, Gl 581 falls into this category. (When looking it up, it's also NSV 7023. NSV stands for New Suspected Variable)
 
  • #47
DaveC426913 said:
...
It's what inspired me to write my http://www.davesbrain.ca/science/gliese/index.html" [Broken].
though, I am wondering how would we be able to even in theory do acceleration of 1g for 10 years. in fact that would need to increase over time as the ship's clock decelerates or it's mass increases (I think the effect is the same just explained differently).

I mean, 6 years trip sounds pretty optimistic. I wonder if there's any propulsion tech that is close to getting this achieved.
 
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  • #48
kamenjar said:
though, I am wondering how would we be able to even in theory do acceleration of 1g for 10 years.
Well, no.

Current proposals for interstellar travel inlcude the Bussard ramjet and Project Orion (which is in principle constructable with existing technology). But they do not reach those kinds of acceleration.
kamenjar said:
in fact that would need to increase over time as the ship's clock decelerates or it's mass increases (I think the effect is the same just explained differently).
This is not how relativistic travel works.

Its mass increases to an outside observer, and its time dilates to an outside observer, this simply means that the ship will be observed to approach c closer and closer but never reach it.

However, the occupants will not experience any increase in mass, nor any slowing of their clock. And most importantly, they will experience the trip taking only 6 years.
 
  • #49
DaveC426913 said:
...
I think I realized what you are saying about mass. That prompted me to post on the Relativity forum. Maybe you can help...
 
  • #50
Just look how misleading this is:

An astronomer picked up a mysterious pulse of light coming from the direction of the newly discovered Earth-like planet almost two years ago, it has emerged.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...ction-newEarth-planet-year.html#ixzz11eggOi2T

http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~drl/publications/clf+00.pdf"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/47_Tucanae" [Broken]

Just goes to show, research goes a long way...
 
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  • #51
Gaius Baltar said:
Just look how misleading this is:



http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~drl/publications/clf+00.pdf"
What a terrible article.

Apparently, hey have already decided its composition is "...rocky with liquid water and atmosphere..."

And I like this comment: "It takes just 37 days to orbit its sun which means its seasons last for just a few days."

The one-face Gliese planets do not have seasons.

Nevermind the fact that they give no details about the mysterious light.
 
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  • #52
Completely Agree Dave.

It just goes to show, the Media and other sources of news outlets will stop at nothing to promote lies & fear mongering. Shame 60% of people who read, believe...

**Sigh...**
 
  • #53
kamenjar said:
I mean, 6 years trip sounds pretty optimistic. I wonder if there's any propulsion tech that is close to getting this achieved.

While it's not hard science, I thought this was a great website for ideas and suggestions regarding long distance space travel-

http://www.projectrho.com/rocket/rocket3aj.html
 
  • #55
could someone offer a physics answer as to when the Gliese 581g existence are due to be officially confirmed or contra-confirmed?
 
  • #56
GlieseWorm said:
what planet do you live on where 40yrs equates to a weekend? Christ , this is a physics site not Miils n Boom.

It was a bit of light hearted humour. No need to be so harsh, perhaps a bit less attitude.
GlieseWorm said:
could someone offer a physics answer as to when the Gliese 581g existence are due to be officially confirmed or contra-confirmed?

Not entirely sure what else you're looking for here, the above discussion covers things nicely.
 
  • #57
GlieseWorm said:
could someone offer a physics answer as to when the Gliese 581g existence are due to be officially confirmed or contra-confirmed?
When someone observes Gliese 581 with a spectroscope with a resolution better than 1 m/s, to translate the Doppler shift into velocity for visible light. Currently, the purported detection of 581g is borderline; improving the spectroscope resolution will make it less borderline.

About spectroscopes better than 1 m/s, I don't know if any are in the works.

There's also the question of how far one can go. Is 1 m/s the limit, or some smaller velocity value?
 
  • #58
lpetrich said:
When someone observes Gliese 581 with a spectroscope with a resolution better than 1 m/s, to translate the Doppler shift into velocity for visible light. Currently, the purported detection of 581g is borderline; improving the spectroscope resolution will make it less borderline.

About spectroscopes better than 1 m/s, I don't know if any are in the works.

There's also the question of how far one can go. Is 1 m/s the limit, or some smaller velocity value?

i have only read of one blip being recorded and the next time they looked the blip didnt appear. to me , if me reading so far is correct, then this would seem to suggest that the confirmation is lacking and that the so called planet is an artefact. combined with the other data that suggests 4 planets not 6, it seems a bit early to come to conclusions about the planet being tidally locked.

if the 'planet' only has a year of 37days, then we should have been seeing a lot more blips by now, and i am not sure we need to request a new spectroscope when what we need is apparently a calendar ?
 
  • #59
Some issues on tidal locking:
quoting Wikipedia from yesterday, my additions in bold:
"An estimate of the time for a body to become tidally locked can be obtained using the following formula:[4]

t,lock=wa^6IQ/3Gm^2,pk,2R^5

where
w is the initial spin rate (radians per second)
a is the semi-major axis of the motion of the satellite around the planet
I is the moment of inertia of the satellite (Gliese 581g of course).
Q is the dissipation function of the satellite.
G is the gravitational constant
(m,p) is the mass of the 'planet' (Gliese 581 itself)
(m,s)is the mass of the satellite

k2 is the tidal Love number of the satellite
R is the radius of the satellite.
Q and k2 are generally very poorly known except for the Earth's Moon which has k2 / Q = 0.0011. However, for a really rough estimate one can take Q≈100 (perhaps conservatively, giving overestimated locking times), and

k2=1.5/(1+(19μ/2pgR)

where
p is the density of the satellite
g is the surface gravity of the satellite
μ is rigidity of the satellite. This can be roughly taken as 3×1010 Nm−2 for rocky objects and 4×109 Nm−2 for icy ones.
As can be seen, even knowing the size and density of the satellite leaves many parameters that must be estimated (especially w, Q, and μ), so that any calculated locking times obtained are expected to be inaccurate, to even factors of ten. Further, during the tidal locking phase the orbital radius a may have been significantly different from that observed nowadays due to subsequent tidal acceleration, and the locking time is extremely sensitive to this value."
 
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  • #60
GlieseWorm said:
Some issues on tidal locking:
quoting Wikipedia from yesterday, my additions in bold:
"An estimate of the time for a body to become tidally locked can be obtained using the following formula:[4]

t,lock=wa^6IQ/3Gm^2,pk,2R^5

where
w is the initial spin rate (radians per second)
a is the semi-major axis of the motion of the satellite around the planet
I is the moment of inertia of the satellite (Gliese 581g of course).
Q is the dissipation function of the satellite.
G is the gravitational constant
(m,p) is the mass of the 'planet' (Gliese 581 itself)
(m,s)is the mass of the satellite

k2 is the tidal Love number of the satellite
R is the radius of the satellite.
Q and k2 are generally very poorly known except for the Earth's Moon which has k2 / Q = 0.0011. However, for a really rough estimate one can take Q≈100 (perhaps conservatively, giving overestimated locking times), and

k2=1.5/(1+(19μ/2pgR)

where
p is the density of the satellite
g is the surface gravity of the satellite
μ is rigidity of the satellite. This can be roughly taken as 3×1010 Nm−2 for rocky objects and 4×109 Nm−2 for icy ones.
As can be seen, even knowing the size and density of the satellite leaves many parameters that must be estimated (especially w, Q, and ), so that any calculated locking times obtained are expected to be inaccurate, to even factors of ten. Further, during the tidal locking phase the orbital radius a may have been significantly different from that observed nowadays due to subsequent tidal acceleration, and the locking time is extremely sensitive to this value."

so what i would like to know is for all these claims of tidal locking, what are the estimates or calculated figures used, including errors, plus an experts personal estimates of probability of tidal locking.
any takers?
 
  • #61
is it possible that gliese581g has a twin and that the two are locked together in tango in what i understand to be the pluto/charon combination, hence we need to wider our search?
in which case the tidal locking calculation could be a double waste of time , beyond math quiz.
 
  • #62
Gaius Baltar said:
Just look how misleading this is:



http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~drl/publications/clf+00.pdf"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/47_Tucanae" [Broken]

Just goes to show, research goes a long way...

DaveC426913 said:
What a terrible article.

Apparently, hey have already decided its composition is "...rocky with liquid water and atmosphere..."

And I like this comment: "It takes just 37 days to orbit its sun which means its seasons last for just a few days."

The one-face Gliese planets do not have seasons.

Nevermind the fact that they give no details about the mysterious light.

guys i am a bit confused here, so i have done some reading around the net; the conclusion i have come to is that you are quoting a newspaper article which was based on Ragbir Bathals laser-like one-off signal from 47 Tucanae, a galaxy "about 16,700 light years away from Earth" (wikipedia). GLiese 581g is 20light years away need i remind you all. However according to a rival forum, the http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/forum_thread.php?id=61590&sort=7
the error lies in the delay that Prof Ragbir Bathal reported his findings and a mistaken belief that they were the same signal i presume.
in fact, the signals were from different parts of the sky, and so Prof Ragbir Bathals group have no link to GLiese581 at all as far as i can tell and certainly not Gliese 581g.

Thus, DaveC426913, with all due respect, it appears that you are quoting the wrong article in your criticism of the conclusions about the nature of the planet, as you have referenced Camilo et al (2000). I can't see how it could be referring to any planets as there have yet to be any planets detected in this entire galaxy, again according to Wikipedia today.
 
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  • #63
Well, since the planet is gravitationally locked with one side always in perpetual darkness and the other in light then the only habitable zone tempertature-wise would be the line between shadow and light (known as the "terminator"). The planet's almost circular orbit will tend to keep this zone fairly stable. However, having a mass three to four times that of Earth means that we weigh more there and will probably have to exert ourselves considerably more just to get about. Neither is a twenty light year distance a paltry consideration in view of our present technology since it would take a spacecraft traveling at Voyager speed well over 70,000 years to get to Alpha Centauri which is apprtox 4 ly away and approx. 350,000 years to get to Gliese.

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Excerpt:

horseshoe7 Wrote:

However, if my calculations are correct, my 200lb body would feel like about 867lbs on the surface of Gliese 581 d... even if I went on a crash diet to get to ~150lbs, I'd STILL weigh about 650 pounds there!... maybe we need to "continue the seach" for more suitable habitable planets? ... hopefully, there is a more Earth-sized planet Gliese 581 f that is right in the middle of the habitable zone of the Gliese 581 system?


https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=359589
 
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  • #64
GlieseWorm said:
i have only read of one blip being recorded and the next time they looked the blip didnt appear. to me , if me reading so far is correct, then this would seem to suggest that the confirmation is lacking and that the so called planet is an artefact. combined with the other data that suggests 4 planets not 6, it seems a bit early to come to conclusions about the planet being tidally locked.
Strictly speaking, it's not a burst of something, it's spectroscopic data.

One uses spectroscopy to measure a star's radial velocity, repeating the measurements over several hours or days or weeks or months or years. One then tries to fit the effect of an orbiting planet to what one observes.

The problem with Gliese 581g is that it does not produce a very strong effect, if it exists. It's barely above the noise.
 
  • #65
Vanadium 50 said:
Before we get too excited, red dwarfs have some problems. One is that many of them - perhaps half - are UV Ceti variables, also called flare stars. They have sporadic flares which are much more dangerous than solar flares - both because they are more energetic (especially in X-rays) and because their planets are closer.

Unfortunately, Gl 581 falls into this category. (When looking it up, it's also NSV 7023. NSV stands for New Suspected Variable)

Unfortunately, the closest star to earth, Proxima Centauri, also falls under that unpredictable red dwarf variable category.
 
  • #66
Emphasis added in quote.
GlieseWorm said:
Thus, DaveC426913, with all due respect, it appears that you are quoting the wrong article in your criticism of the conclusions about the nature of the planet, as you have referenced Camilo et al (2000). I can't see how it could be referring to any planets as there have yet to be any planets detected in this entire galaxy, again according to Wikipedia today.


Huh? We've already detected hundreds of exoplanets in the Milky Way, starting in 1992.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exoplanet_detection
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_B1257+12
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrasolar_Planet
Wikipedia said:
There are 538 such planets that have been confirmed as of March 11, 2011.
Of course, the number of known exoplanets was lower at the time of your post, but much higher than 0.
 
  • #67
FtlIsAwesome said:
Huh?
Yeah. Who knows what he means...
 
<h2>1. What is Gliese 581g?</h2><p>Gliese 581g is an exoplanet, meaning it is a planet outside of our solar system, that was discovered orbiting the red dwarf star Gliese 581. It is located just 20 light-years away from Earth.</p><h2>2. How was Gliese 581g discovered?</h2><p>Gliese 581g was discovered using the radial velocity method, which measures the slight wobble of a star caused by the gravitational pull of orbiting planets. This wobble can be detected through changes in the star's light spectrum.</p><h2>3. Is Gliese 581g habitable?</h2><p>There is evidence that Gliese 581g may be a potentially habitable planet, as it is located in the "habitable zone" of its star, meaning it is at a distance where liquid water could exist on its surface. However, more research is needed to determine its exact conditions and potential for life.</p><h2>4. How does Gliese 581g compare to Earth?</h2><p>Gliese 581g is about 3-4 times the mass of Earth and is believed to be a rocky planet. It orbits its star much closer than Earth does to the Sun, resulting in a much shorter year of just 37 Earth days. Its surface temperature is estimated to be around -12 degrees Celsius.</p><h2>5. Will we ever be able to visit Gliese 581g?</h2><p>Currently, it is not possible for humans to travel to Gliese 581g due to the vast distance and technological limitations. However, ongoing advancements in space travel technology may one day make it possible for us to explore this exoplanet and others in our galaxy.</p>

1. What is Gliese 581g?

Gliese 581g is an exoplanet, meaning it is a planet outside of our solar system, that was discovered orbiting the red dwarf star Gliese 581. It is located just 20 light-years away from Earth.

2. How was Gliese 581g discovered?

Gliese 581g was discovered using the radial velocity method, which measures the slight wobble of a star caused by the gravitational pull of orbiting planets. This wobble can be detected through changes in the star's light spectrum.

3. Is Gliese 581g habitable?

There is evidence that Gliese 581g may be a potentially habitable planet, as it is located in the "habitable zone" of its star, meaning it is at a distance where liquid water could exist on its surface. However, more research is needed to determine its exact conditions and potential for life.

4. How does Gliese 581g compare to Earth?

Gliese 581g is about 3-4 times the mass of Earth and is believed to be a rocky planet. It orbits its star much closer than Earth does to the Sun, resulting in a much shorter year of just 37 Earth days. Its surface temperature is estimated to be around -12 degrees Celsius.

5. Will we ever be able to visit Gliese 581g?

Currently, it is not possible for humans to travel to Gliese 581g due to the vast distance and technological limitations. However, ongoing advancements in space travel technology may one day make it possible for us to explore this exoplanet and others in our galaxy.

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