Habitable Planet outside fo the solar system

By the way, there was a show on a hypothetical example of how life might look or work on a planet like this (assuming it has life, of course) - Aurelia.
 
As you can see from my math above, Gliese 581 c experiences about 50 times the tidal effects of Mercury.

Are you sure you did the math right? You post says you compared Mass*Distance^(1/3) when you should be comparing Mass1*Mass2*Distance^(-3).
 
Why not combine the two? I've always argued towards creating an Intergalactic Battle Fleet of Doom. We can explore, and blow things up!

Ha, one at a time, one at a time. You don't try to invent a car before the invention of the wheel. :p
 
Are you sure you did the math right? You post says you compared Mass*Distance^(1/3) when you should be comparing Mass1*Mass2*Distance^(-3).

No, he got it right. He's comparing force per mass (the per mass being the one in which the tidal force is being applied to) and the 1/3 was a typo.
 
Aliens is attacking!!!!!! :hide:

http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Planet_find_gets_British_bookies_sc_04252007.html

British bookmakers wasted no time slashing the odds on aliens being discovered after astronomers announced Wednesday that they had discovered an Earth-like planet.

William Hill cut the odds on proving the existence of extra-terrestrial life from 1,000-1 to 100-1.

"We felt we had to react to the news that an Earth-like planet which could support intelligent life had been discovered -- after all, we don't know for sure that intelligent extra-terrestrial life has not already been discovered, but is being hushed up," said spokesman Graham Sharpe.

I think maybe they should stick to horses! At least racing's a fair game with no cheating, secrecy or conspiracies. :rolleyes: ;)
 
Edit: Bill's right, my calculations should be fine. It is a typo

That's good. I was too lazy to have made the calculations myself. But at any rate there can't be many terrestrial planets that are close enough to red-dwarfs to have large enough tidal heating to be active.
 
How old is the universe anyway? What are the odds that "we" are the first intelligent life form? Not quite sure if my question is clear enough...

Anyhoo, I was reading about the Panspermia theory. Very interesting.


What about the "Drake Equation"?
 
How about a spaceship that lets humans reproduce.. :P
 
The universe is 13.7 billion years old. :p

Panspermia ultimately has the problem of shifting the question.
 
Breaking News: The scientist who discovered the planet has decided to name it "Arse". (nah, j/k, but that's what I would have called it).
 
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