[guide.chat] news second earth

  • From: vanessa <qwerty1234567a@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "GUIDE CHAT" <guide.chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2012 00:06:54 +0100

A second Earth? Telescope finds solar system that mirrors ours - and offers 
hope that life could thrive on its worlds
First solar sytem where planets 'line up' like planets of solar system
Most other planets found so far are 'hot Jupiters' - uninhabitable worlds that 
orbit too close to parent star
Three planets orbit with planes aligned with equator of their sun
By ROB WAUGH
PUBLISHED: 08:03, 26 July 2012 | UPDATED: 08:10, 26 July 2012

A solar system arranged just like our own has been discovered a thousand light 
years from the Earth.
The group of planets line up in a way similar to those in our solar systems, 
with their orbital planes aligned with the equator of their Sun.
Dr Roberto Sanchis-Ojeda and colleagues analysed their transits over spots on 
the Sun-like star Kepler-30 and found they mirrored those round our Sun.

Mirror image? A solar system arranged just like our own has been discovered a 
thousand light years from the Earth
In our solar system the Sun?s equator and the planets? orbital planes are 
nearly aligned, presumably a consequence of their formation from a single 
spinning gaseous disk.
There are only three planets in the alien solar system, compared to the eight 
in ours, but it is the first time one with the same alignment as our own has 
been found.
The observation described in Nature sheds light on the conditions that 
determine the architecture of a planetary system.
Many such ?exoplanets? do not display this arrangement and isolated ?hot 
Jupiters? - giant planets that orbit too close to their parent stars to harbour 
life - are often misaligned, some even with opposite orbits.
The new planets captured by the Kepler space mission suggest high orbital 
tilts, known as obliquities, are confined to systems like hot Jupiters that 
experienced disruptive dynamical interactions
r Sanchis-Ojeda, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said: ?The Sun?s 
equator and the planets? orbital planes are nearly aligned, which is presumably 
a consequence of their formation from a single spinning gaseous disk.
?Here we report an analysis of transits of planets over starspots on the 
Sun-like star Kepler-30, and show the orbits of its three planets are aligned 
with the stellar equator.
?Furthermore, the orbits are aligned with one another to within a few degrees. 
This configuration is similar to that of our Solar System, and contrasts with 
the isolated hot Jupiters.?

The new solar system has an arrangement that mirrors ours

Prof Drake Deming, of the University of Maryland, reviewed the discovery for 
the journal and described it as ?fascinating.?
He said: ?The researchers deduce all three transiting planets in this system 
orbit in the same plane, to within one angular degree of inclination. This very 
tight arrangement in Kepler-30 immediately brings to mind the closely aligned 
orbits of the Solar System.?
One of the first and most spectacular results from Kepler was the discovery 
that some stars host multiple transiting planets, six being the current record.
The host star in the Kepler-30 system is magnetically active and covered by 
starspots - regions that are darker and cooler that the rest of the star?s 
surface.
Prof Deming said: ?Like the Solar System, the planets of Kepler-30 clearly 
originated in a spinning disk of gas.
?The fact some planetary orbits can be neatly aligned with the plane of their 
star?s equator, whereas others are wildly misaligned, shows we have much still 
to learn about the formation and orbital evolution of planets.
?Finding planets that line up with starspots might seem like a lucky one-off. 
But the history
of extrasolar planetary science shows today?s one-time occurrence is tomorrow?s 
standard technique.?
Currently, NASA is contemplating the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite 
(TESS), to survey
the entire sky for planets transiting nearby stars.
Prof Deming added: ?Today?s line-up of ?planets on the spot? is a glimpse into 
the future of exoplanetary science.?


from
Vanessa The Google Girl.
my skype name is rainbowstar123

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