What else does a planet have to do but sit around and wait for us to see it?In a way, the newly discovered planet was sitting right in front of astronomers' faces, just waiting for them to look.
What else does a planet have to do but sit around and wait for us to see it?
GJ 1214b is a so called super earth roughly half the size of Neptune. This large a planet will have much more gravity and most likely have tremendous atmospheric pressures on the surface, live Venus. To have life as we know it, or rather a planet we can live on, you have to have atmospheric pressures and global temperatures that allow water to exist in all three of it's phases, liquid, gas and solid, which is the case with Earth.
It is this combination of atmospheric pressure and temperature range which is well understood that we have to look for. While they have found evidence of cloud formation on GJ 1214b that is not an indication that liquid water can exist. Even Jupiter has water vapor in it's clouds.
There are so many things that have to happen for a planet to really be Earth like (good for humans) that colonize-able planets are going to be rare. But given the fact that it did happen at least once we know of, certainly means it CAN happen in a universe that obeys the physical laws we do.
My biggest issue with a so called Earth twin is biology. If it has life, it is most certainly different than ours. Are our biologics even compatible or do we have to sterilize the planet and rebuild it's ecosphere? And what does that say about us if we do?
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