g.neuman
Far Out Space Nut
You took him seriously? I would have thought the reference to "Endor" and "smashing" planets together to make one bigger, more perfect planet, might have been a clue.![]()
LOL. I wish Mars was significantly bigger too (as do most astronomy buffs, I'd imagine), but I've never really taken it farther than "I wish Mars was bigger". Rearranging the inner solar system and smashing planets together hadn't really occured to me.
On the other hand, who knows what kind of technologies will be available to our decendents? We went from "Hey, this 'farming' idea looks like it might have some possibilities" to "One small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind" in less than 5000 years. Assuming nothing wipes us out, the people who live 10,000 or 20,000 years from now might well be able to rearrange the solar system to better suit the needs of our species. Venus and Mercury certainly aren't doing anyone any good where they are.
As for the thread's original question, any answers we get from missions like TPF and Darwin will be far from conclusive. Picking out an Earth-sized planet will be a chancy thing under even the best of circumstances, to say nothing about determining whether or not such a planet is actually habitable. Barring some dramatic and unforseen leap in technology, game designers and sci-fi authors alike will be safe in giving Alpha Centauri a hypothetical Earthlike world for some time to come.
Personally, I think future generations are likely to discover that most Earthlike worlds are the moons of gas giants anyway (which, unfortunately, would be virtually impossible for TPF to detect). The majority of other star systems don't seem to be arranged very much like ours; Jovian planets can and do occur in every conceivable orbit, from very close in to very far out. The presence of such planets utterly dominates the formation of the rest of the system in a variety of ways, so small rocky worlds in water orbits are probably not the norm. Judging by what we currently know, I believe our best bet for finding Earthlike worlds is to find gas giants in stable, circular water orbits and then hope they have a big moon or two.
Interesting topic!