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New solar twin could shed light on another Earth (Forwarded)



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 5th 06, 06:34 PM posted to sci.astro
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Default New solar twin could shed light on another Earth (Forwarded)

Marketing & Communications
Australian National University
Canberra, Australia

Further information:

ANU Media Office
Jane O'Dwyer (02) 6125 5001 / 0416 249 231
Amanda Morgan (02) 6125 5575 / 0416 249 245

Thursday 23 March 2006

New solar twin could shed light on another Earth

ANU astronomers have discovered a nearby solar twin which may shed light
on the search for planets that are similar to Earth and that may even
support life.

HD98618 is only the second star found so far that is almost identical to
the Sun in age, size, temperature and chemistry, according to the
researchers Dr Jorge Meléndez, Ms Katie Dodds-Eden and Mr José Robles,
from the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics.

"This solar twin doesn't only have the same mass as the Sun, it was also
formed with the same 'chemical recipe'. So this star was equipped in the
same way as the Sun to form Earth-like planets," Mr Robles said.

"Hopefully, as new planet finding techniques are developed and refined,
astronomers will find whether HD98618 hosts terrestrial planets, which
may even contain life."

HD98618 lies a mere 126 light-years away in the northern constellation
of Ursa Major (the 'Big Dipper'). It is bright enough to see in
binoculars, but only in the Northern Hemisphere.

The researchers believe that HD98618 is about four billion years-old,
about 10 per cent younger than our own Sun. Its chemical properties are
almost identical to the Sun and to the other closest Sun twin, a star
known as 18 Scorpii, which was discovered a decade ago.

"It means that hypothetical terrestrial planets around this solar twin
may have had enough time to develop some kind of complex life, assuming
the time-scale for complex life formation is similar to Earth's," Dr
Meléndez said.

The team says that focused observations of the two stars by
planet-hunter teams could reveal or rule out within a few years giant
planets, such as our own Jupiter, around HD98618. "18 Scorpii and
HD98618 offer hope to find solar systems similar to our own in the
Universe," Dr Meléndez said.

The discovery also has implications for research in other areas. Solar
twins are ideal for the absolute calibration of astronomical measuring
instruments. They can provide data useful in modelling the solar
phenomena that may affect climate change, and will help settle the
argument about the uniqueness or otherwise of our Sun and Solar System.

"We had a number of candidates with similar properties to the Sun, but
while we held out hope for each star that it would turn out to be really
special, it was not at all certain to happen. HD 98618 was one of the
last of our candidates to be analysed, so it was quite a surprise when
we discovered how it stood out from the other candidates, together with
18 Scorpii. It was very exciting -- I had to blink twice to be sure I
wasn't imagining it," Ms Dodds-Eden said.

The researchers made the discovery using the largest telescope in the
world, the 10m Keck I telescope on the summit of Hawaii's dormant Mauna
Kea volcano.

Their paper detailing the discovery will be published in Astrophysical
Journal Letters. Related images are available from the ANU Media Office.

IMAGE CAPTION:
[http://info.anu.edu.au/mac/Media/Med...D98618main.jpg
(34KB)]
Colour enhanced zoom around HD98618, created using information from the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
  #2  
Old April 5th 06, 09:59 PM posted to sci.astro
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default New solar twin could shed light on another Earth (Forwarded)


"Andrew Yee" ""ayee \"@ nova.astro.utoronto.ca" wrote in message
.. .
Marketing & Communications
Australian National University
Canberra, Australia

Further information:

ANU Media Office
Jane O'Dwyer (02) 6125 5001 / 0416 249 231
Amanda Morgan (02) 6125 5575 / 0416 249 245

Thursday 23 March 2006

New solar twin could shed light on another Earth

ANU astronomers have discovered a nearby solar twin which may shed light
on the search for planets that are similar to Earth and that may even
support life.

HD98618 is only the second star found so far that is almost identical to
the Sun in age, size, temperature and chemistry, according to the
researchers Dr Jorge Meléndez, Ms Katie Dodds-Eden and Mr José Robles,
from the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics.

"This solar twin doesn't only have the same mass as the Sun, it was also
formed with the same 'chemical recipe'. So this star was equipped in the
same way as the Sun to form Earth-like planets," Mr Robles said.

"Hopefully, as new planet finding techniques are developed and refined,
astronomers will find whether HD98618 hosts terrestrial planets, which
may even contain life."

HD98618 lies a mere 126 light-years away in the northern constellation of
Ursa Major (the 'Big Dipper'). It is bright enough to see in binoculars,
but only in the Northern Hemisphere.

The researchers believe that HD98618 is about four billion years-old,
about 10 per cent younger than our own Sun. Its chemical properties are
almost identical to the Sun and to the other closest Sun twin, a star
known as 18 Scorpii, which was discovered a decade ago.

"It means that hypothetical terrestrial planets around this solar twin
may have had enough time to develop some kind of complex life, assuming
the time-scale for complex life formation is similar to Earth's," Dr
Meléndez said.


So a earth-like planet could theoretically exist around this star. Since
it is about 500-600 million years younger, there could be trilobites on
this theoretical planet. COOL! lol

George


 




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