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Most liveable alien worlds ranked

Zabaniyah

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Scientists have outlined which moons and planets are most likely to harbour extra-terrestrial life.

Among the most habitable alien worlds were Saturn's moon Titan and the exoplanet Gliese 581g - thought to reside some 20.5 light-years away in the constellation Libra.

The international team devised two rating systems to assess the probability of hosting alien life.

They have published their results in the journal Astrobiology.
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. - Astrobiology - 0(0):

In their paper, the authors propose two different indices: an Earth Similarity Index (ESI) and a Planetary Habitability Index (PHI).

"The first question is whether Earth-like conditions can be found on other worlds, since we know empirically that those conditions could harbour life," said co-author Dr Dirk Schulze-Makuch from Washington State University, US.

"The second question is whether conditions exist on exoplanets that suggest the possibility of other forms of life, whether known to us or not."

As the name suggests, the ESI rates planets and moons on how Earth-like they are, taking into account such factors as size, density and distance from the parent star.

The PHI looks at a different set of factors, such as whether the world has a rocky or frozen surface, whether it has an atmosphere or a magnetic field.

It also considers the energy available to any organisms, either through light from a parent star or via a process called tidal flexing, in which gravitational interactions with another object can heat a planet or moon internally.

And finally, the PHI takes into account chemistry - such as whether organic compounds are present - and whether liquid solvents might be available for vital chemical reactions.

The maximum value for the Earth Similarity Index was 1.00 - for Earth, unsurprisingly. The highest scores beyond our solar system were for Gliese 581g (whose existence is doubted by some astronomers), with 0.89, and another exoplanet orbiting the same star - Gliese 581d, with an ESI value of 0.74.

The Gliese 581 system has been well studied by astronomers and comprises four - possibly five - planets orbiting a red dwarf star.

HD 69830 d, a Neptune-sized exoplanet orbiting a different star in the constellation Puppis, also scored highly (0.60). It is thought to lie in the so-called Goldilocks Zone - the region around its parent star where surface temperatures are neither too hot nor too cold for life.

The highly rated worlds from our own solar system were Mars, with a value of 0.70, and Mercury, with 0.60.

The Planet Habitability Index produced different results. The top finisher here was Saturn's moon Titan, which scored 0.64, followed by Mars (0.59) and Jupiter's moon Europa (0.47), which is thought to host a susbsurface water ocean heated by tidal flexing.

The highest scoring exoplanets were, again Gliese 581g (0.49) and Gliese 581d (0.43).

In recent years, the search for potentially habitable planets outside our solar system has stepped up several gears. Nasa's Kepler space telescope, launched into orbit in 2009, has found more than 1,000 candidate planets so far.

Future telescopes may even be able to detect so-called biomarkers in the light emitted by distant planets, such as the presence of chlorophyll, a key pigment in plants.

Source: BBC News - Most liveable alien worlds ranked
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I can't wait to invade other planets :devil:

FOR THE SKY PEOPLE!
 
Mercury is an interesting choice. It's tidally locked, meaning one side faces the sun all the time, and the other is in permanent shade.

So the day side goes to 800 degrees, the night side to -200 degrees. But what about the twighlight part? Halfway around it, there should be a region that is a constant 25 C. The problem, though... NO atmosphere!
 
Mercury is an interesting choice. It's tidally locked, meaning one side faces the sun all the time, and the other is in permanent shade.

So the day side goes to 800 degrees, the night side to -200 degrees. But what about the twighlight part? Halfway around it, there should be a region that is a constant 25 C. The problem, though... NO atmosphere!

without an atmosphere, there won't exist a part at 25 degrees......
 
without an atmosphere, there won't exist a part at 25 degrees......

I know, that made me wonder why Mercury was so highly ranked.

But not all life needs an atmosphere. By definition, anaerobic bacteria live in areas of chemical concentration with no atmosphere at all.
 
As the name suggests, the ESI rates planets and moons on how Earth-like they are, taking into account such factors as size, density and distance from the parent star.
That's where we're going off on a tangent! Why do the scientists/astronomers apply Earth-life parameters for life on other worlds? There could be silicon based life forms for all we know. There could be life forms that don't require water or even oxygen. Microbial life has been found in the deepest parts of oceans where there is no light, and living near volcanic vents with temperatures of hundred of degrees Celsius. Microbes have been found by Russian scientists to exist 6000 ft under the frozen wastes of Siberia in temperatures below minus 100 Celsius!

So why are we basing our theories on life existing only in the so called 'Goldie Locks' zone, "Green Belt" or "Ecosphere" where a planet needs to be orbiting the parent sun at the correct distance for the right temperature, gravity, oxygen content and so on like Earth?

We're barking up the wrong tree. There may be billions of planets out there harboring life - but not as we know it!

We're not alone and that's for sure!

Cheers!
 
Lets be clear, liveable does not only mean humans, bacteria also counts.
 
I know, that made me wonder why Mercury was so highly ranked.

But not all life needs an atmosphere. By definition, anaerobic bacteria live in areas of chemical concentration with no atmosphere at all.

Of course, but we are talking about habitation by humans being the ultimate goal.
That raises the question of Titan. With oceans of Methane and freezing temperatures, how is that even habitable? Strictly no barbecuing parties on Titan!! Look at the bright side though, no smoking either!!
 
Of course, but we are talking about habitation by humans being the ultimate goal.
That raises the question of Titan. With oceans of Methane and freezing temperatures, how is that even habitable? Strictly no barbecuing parties on Titan!! Look at the bright side though, no smoking either!!

I wonder what will happen if I light up a match there :confused:
 
I wonder what will happen if I light up a match there :confused:

Apparently there is very little to no oxygen in Titan's atmosphere. Unless you got your own Oxygen tank (which you WILL need on Titan) and its leaking, I guess there wouldnt be any fireworks!
 
Why dont we just try to colonize the moon first before venturing any further
It is an engineering challenge buy not impossible

Will the lunar dwellers be called Lunatics ?
 
That's where we're going off on a tangent! Why do the scientists/astronomers apply Earth-life parameters for life on other worlds? There could be silicon based life forms for all we know. There could be life forms that don't require water or even oxygen. Microbial life has been found in the deepest parts of oceans where there is no light, and living near volcanic vents with temperatures of hundred of degrees Celsius. Microbes have been found by Russian scientists to exist 6000 ft under the frozen wastes of Siberia in temperatures below minus 100 Celsius!

So why are we basing our theories on life existing only in the so called 'Goldie Locks' zone, "Green Belt" or "Ecosphere" where a planet needs to be orbiting the parent sun at the correct distance for the right temperature, gravity, oxygen content and so on like Earth?

We're barking up the wrong tree. There may be billions of planets out there harboring life - but not as we know it!

We're not alone and that's for sure!

Cheers!

Exactly there might be others that dont resemble us in any ways,maybe survive on stuff that'd kill us,have different ideas on the science's so I care bollocks for these things not every liveable planet has to be like earth anyway even if it did we cant reach there as current laws of physics and technology prohibit it.
 
Here's the thing, guys - it's fun to imagine aliens that swim in liquid helium, or aliens like crystal snowflakes, but the reality is, that chemistry is constant everywhere.

Life requires complex chained molecules of vast length. Life also requires chemically coded information. Only the carbon molecule can do this, and silicon is a distant second, so far behind as to make silicon life almost an impossibility. So despite our fantasies, life pretty much has to be carbon based. And that means carbon chemistry must be respected. Temperatures have to be appropriate. There must be liquid water, etc.

There are two legitimate alternatives to carbon life. One is machine life, which I guess you could call silicon-based, but the notion that microprocessors would evolve is pretty silly, so machine life would have to be created by carbon life. The other is energy/spiritual, "life" - or sentience - outside of matter. Like spirits.
 
i hope israel is shifted to titan and give peace to rest of the world
 

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