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#11
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Russell Wallace wrote:
if anything, a mass extinction every now and then is positively beneficial. Note that you are speaking as the (accidental?) winner of many of these events. The dinosaurs (as well as 95%+ of the rest of the species that have ever lived on Earth) would strongly disagree. Are mass extinctions strong drivers of evolution? Probably, but they very well may happen in any situation that allows life (& the resulting complex ecosystems). The original poster was probably more concerned with things like habitable obliquities, which may be a good point. -- Brian Davis |
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#13
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#14
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P. Ussyliquor wrote:
My point is, that when astronomers talk about "earth-like" planets, they are usually only refering to lumps of rock of a certain size and perhaps a certain distance from a star. And you need a LOT more than the right distance from the sun to have a planet that can sustain life. We once calculated it out in one of my astronomy classes. The estimates were about one in a hundred stars. But, there's a catch. Consider how long we have been around as humans. We know that there was a cataclysm about 35-40K years ago that wiped out almost all humans. We can all trace our genes back to less than a dozen individuals at that time. Then there was the Ice age. Then, before that, there were three mass extinctions. Given all of that, we figured there's about a 1/10 chance of there being somewhat evolved life that hasn't completely died off due to whatever factors. Most planets will be like Mare - once capable of supporting life, but now an irradiated barren rock. Then you have to consider that we've only been even moderately technologicaly advanced for 5-10K years at best. The last 2-3K is where most of our development has taken place. Also, any advanced civilization is very likely to destroy itself given enough time. Let's say a 10,000 year timespan. Out of 2-3 billion years, that's an awfully small window. Let's say 2 billion years divided by 10,000 years. That's a 1 in 200,000 chance that we've even hit the right era where they are at a level near ours. More advanced races would likely see us as violent oddities to be studied - and definately avoided, so contact with them would be very rare. ... What it worked out to was our class came up with the figure that at any time in our galaxy, there are about ten starts with life at a level near ours, but they are all over the place and travelling there at even a significant fraction of light would take so long that there'd likely be nothing there when we get there. Finding the right ten out of the entire galaxy is also ubsurd - even if we could scan every single one, it would take hundreds of years to catalog them all. |
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P. Ussyliquor wrote:
My point is, that when astronomers talk about "earth-like" planets, they are usually only refering to lumps of rock of a certain size and perhaps a certain distance from a star. I apologize then - I saw you list several objection to the potential habitability of such a body, and tried to address them. You are in a sense correct - a "habitable" planet to an astronomer is indeed generally a rocky world with a limited atmosphere, with a surface temperature & pressure that supports liquid water. And, honestly, that's a pretty good definition: for instance, the only "earth-like" planet in the solar system by this broad definition is, well... Earth. And you need a LOT more than the right distance from the sun to have a planet that can sustain life. Perhaps. Again, as you noted before, there is a derth of hard data here. What other conditions (other than those listed above) would you consider essential? I'd say an active internal convection (the source of such heat is not as critical) is required, but beyond that... as I noted, a large moon is probably a red herring. Presence/absence of a jovian class object is questionable as well. These models do NOT predict Earth-like planets as opposed to Mars-like planets. Actually (from what I can dig out of the press release - not much to go on, I agree), they are exluding Mars-like planets. Such a planet doesn't retain a hydrosphere, which is something they seem to specificly look at. But when you announce "Earth-like" planets, the general public doesn't think "dead rocks with some ice caps" they think of planets that can sustain life. More's the pity for the general public - keep in mind, this is a press release, and it's not even one I've seen picked up on the AP or other wires. Cut them some slck, it seems like some very interesting research. -- Brian Davis |
#16
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In article .net,
Joseph Oberlander wrote: But, there's a catch. Consider how long we have been around as humans. We know that there was a cataclysm about 35-40K years ago that wiped out almost all humans. We can all trace our genes back to less than a dozen individuals at that time. Then there was the Ice age. Then, before that, there were three mass extinctions. Given all of that, we figured there's about a 1/10 chance of there being somewhat evolved life that hasn't completely died off due to whatever factors. Most planets will be like Mare - once capable of supporting life, but now an irradiated barren rock. Five big extinctions (possibly six depending on how the Pleistocene works out): Cretaceous-Tertiary, End Triassic, Permian-Triassic (the big kahuna, against which other MEs are mere hicoughs), Late Devonian and Ordovician-Silurian. Note how in all case, including the Permian one (which killed something like 95% of all species), were followed by a recovery of diversity, although not of disparity. What I take from that is that terminating all life is actually difficult and that given survivors, variation, selection and time empty niches will be refilled and indeed new ones discovered. -- "The Union Nationale has brought [Quebec] to the edge of an abyss. With Social Credit you will take one step forward." Camil Samson |
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Matthew Montchalin writes:
On Fri, 12 Dec 2003, Russell Wallace wrote: Solid planets three times Earth's diameter? i.e. with more than 27 times the mass? (Presumably considerably more than 27 times, since the core would be pretty compressed at that stage.) Is that really possible? They probably wouldn't rotate as fast, would they? Actually, to the extent that our own (apparently anomolous) solar system is any guide, and to the degree the numerical simulations are accurate, large planets tend to rotate _faster_ than small planets, because being more compact, they have smaller radii of gyration (moment of inertia per unit mass). -- Gordon D. Pusch perl -e '$_ = \n"; s/NO\.//; s/SPAM\.//; print;' |
#19
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