ASA Discover New Earth Like Planet - Kepler-22b
35,002
Uploaded by keithypops on Dec 5, 2011
It may have a radius about 2.4 times that of our home planet, but NASA scientists have confirmed that Kepler-22b — depicted in the artist's conception up top — is the first planet we've ever confirmed orbits within the so-called "habitable zone" of a Sun-like star, making it the most Earth-like planet we've yet discovered.
In astronomy, the habitable zone (also known as the Goldilocks zone") is the region surrounding a star in which an orbiting planet could maintain liquid water (and, by extension, life) on its surface. And as the "Goldilocks" moniker implies, whether or not a planet resides inside a habitable zone has everything to do with whether the planet is a little too cold, a little too hot, or just right, temperature-wise.
Take Kepler-21b, for example, whose discovery was announced last week by the National Optical Astronomy Observatory. Kepler-21b is even closer to the size of Earth than Kepler-22b, but it orbits far too close to its sun to sustain any form of life we're familiar with; as this conception of K-21b by artist Ron Miller clearly illustrates, surface temperatures on the planet are estimated to reach as much as 3000-degrees Fahrenheit — that's hot enough to melt iron, not to mention any hope of us ever calling K-21b "Earth 2.0."
But Kepler-22b is a different story. Sure, the planet orbits about 15% closer to its star than Earth does to the Sun, but its star is also significantly cooler, dimmer, and smaller than ours. And while scientists have yet to determine K-22b's composition — be it rocky, gaseous or liquid — they estimate that surface temperatures on K-22b average a very Earth-like 72-degrees Fahrenheit.
"This is a major milestone on the road to finding Earth's twin," said Douglas Hudgins, Kepler program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Kepler's results continue to demonstrate the importance of NASA's science missions, which aim to answer some of the biggest questions about our place in the universe."
In astronomy, the habitable zone (also known as the Goldilocks zone") is the region surrounding a star in which an orbiting planet could maintain liquid water (and, by extension, life) on its surface. And as the "Goldilocks" moniker implies, whether or not a planet resides inside a habitable zone has everything to do with whether the planet is a little too cold, a little too hot, or just right, temperature-wise.
Take Kepler-21b, for example, whose discovery was announced last week by the National Optical Astronomy Observatory. Kepler-21b is even closer to the size of Earth than Kepler-22b, but it orbits far too close to its sun to sustain any form of life we're familiar with; as this conception of K-21b by artist Ron Miller clearly illustrates, surface temperatures on the planet are estimated to reach as much as 3000-degrees Fahrenheit — that's hot enough to melt iron, not to mention any hope of us ever calling K-21b "Earth 2.0."
But Kepler-22b is a different story. Sure, the planet orbits about 15% closer to its star than Earth does to the Sun, but its star is also significantly cooler, dimmer, and smaller than ours. And while scientists have yet to determine K-22b's composition — be it rocky, gaseous or liquid — they estimate that surface temperatures on K-22b average a very Earth-like 72-degrees Fahrenheit.
"This is a major milestone on the road to finding Earth's twin," said Douglas Hudgins, Kepler program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Kepler's results continue to demonstrate the importance of NASA's science missions, which aim to answer some of the biggest questions about our place in the universe."
see all
All Comments (267)
Add a channel now to post a comment!
- This was discovered some time ago. Not really breaking news sky . Stephen Hawkins did a documentary on it last year!XTSLAY3R 25 minutes ago
- @toady230uk oh dear...MegaJaycop 29 minutes ago
- Remember reach........toady230uk 32 minutes ago
- I wonder if their are life forms similar to human compositioncondarth1 32 minutes ago
- It's a shame really because unless there is an intelligent race with high tech spaceships able to travel at the speed of light on that planet then we won't be reaching this planet in any of our lifetimes.JumpHD 38 minutes ago
- Wow... Name it something better than 'Kepler-22b', NASA.That sounds so retarded, don't care if its the telescope's name that discovered it.However this is a most interesting discovery, well done!OneWingBoss 39 minutes ago
- Lightyears is a measurement of distance, not time... Stoopid ass...hugestpenisEVA 41 minutes ago
- Light years is a measurement of distance not time!... You stoopid ass...hugestpenisEVA 42 minutes ago
- Could have life on it. Exiting really!Theviewerinthewater 44 minutes ago
- I am 25 and u don a good job NASAthedynamix 46 minutes ago
1:38Dell™ Mobile Computingby Dell VlogPromoted Video5,181 views
0:48NASA discovers third life-sustaining planet: Ke...by hckrwolf8,632 views
0:41Kepler-22b: ecco il pianeta che assomiglia alla...by YouFocusTV3,993 views
1:59Scientists Confirm Existence of Earth-Like Plan...by EQReporter10,136 views
1:03The Optical Path in the Kepler - 22b Photometerby FlashyLifeTV7,029 views
0:37Kepler 22b - New Planetby JAdamVilgaJ7,763 views
1:53Kepler 22b , New earth-like planet found that m...by T
Video Responses