Moons 'could hold alien life-like Pandora in Avatar'
Moons like the one depicted in the film Avatar may be among the most
common places to find alien life, scientists believe.
Astronomers came to the conclusion after identifying up to 15 new
planets orbiting the life-friendly "habitable zones" of stars.
All are giant gaseous worlds similar in size to Jupiter or Neptune.
While such planets would not themselves be suitable for Earth-like
life, they could be circled by moons on which there are forests, oceans
and living creatures.
Pandora, the fictional moon in Avatar, is just such a world. So far
only one of the 15 newly discovered objects has been confirmed as an
exoplanet with 99.9 percent certainty. The rest still fall into the
category of "candidate" planets while further evidence is collected. The
confirmed planet, known as PH2 b, orbits a sun-like star in the
constellation Cygnus several hundred light years away.Astronomer Dr
Chris Lintott, from Oxford University, a member of the international
team behind the discovery, said: "There's an obsession with finding
Earth-like planets but what we are discovering with planets such as PH2
b is far stranger.
"Jupiter has several large water-rich moons. Imaging dragging that
system into the comfortably warm region where the Earth is. If such a
planet had Earth-size moons, we'd see not Europa and Callisto but worlds
with rivers, lakes and all sorts of habitats: a surprising scenario that
might just be common.
"It may be that the most common habitable worlds are moons around
Jupiter and Neptune-size planets rather than rocky planets as in our own
solar system."
Members of the public helped astronomers identify the candidate
exoplanets by logging onto the planethunters.org website on their home
computers.
The Planet Hunters project invites "citizen scientists" to spot graph
patterns signifying the tell-tale dip in brightness as planets pass in
front of their parent stars.
Follow-up work with the Keck telescope in Hawaii provided the proof
that PH2 b is almost certainly a genuine planet.
More than 40 volunteers are credited in a paper on the research
published online by the Astrophysical Journal.
One, retired police office Roy Jackson, 71, from Birtley near
Gateshead, said: "It is difficult to put into words, the pleasure,
wonderment and perhaps even pride that I have in some small way been
able to assist in the discovery of a planet."
Another, electronics engineer Mark Hadley from Faversham said: "Now
when people ask me what I achieved last year I can say I have helped
discover a possible new planet around a distant star. How cool is that?"
Planet Hunters lead scientist Professor Debra Fisher, from Yale
University in the US said: "We are seeing the emergence of a new era in
the Planet Hunters project where our volunteers seem to be at least as
efficient as the computer algorithms at finding planets orbiting at
habitable zone distances from the host stars.
"Now, the hunt is not just targeting any old exoplanet; volunteers
are homing in on habitable worlds."Before the latest finds, 19 other
exoplanets had already been located in habitable zones. Also known as
the "Goldilocks zone", this is the orbital path where temperatures are
not too hot or cold but "just right" to permit liquid surface water.
Dr Ji Wang, another Planet Hunters scientist from Yale University
said: "We can speculate that PH2 b might have a rocky moon that would be
suitable for life.
I can't wait for the day when astronomers report detecting signs of
life on other worlds instead of just locating potentially habitable
environments. That could happen any day now."
- PA
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