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marketrent OP t1_j767v94 wrote

Findings in title quoted from the linked summary^1 for a hyperlinked journal paper.^2

From the linked summary^1 released by the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy:

>A team of astronomers led by MPIA scientist Diana Kossakowski have discovered an Earth-mass exoplanet orbiting in the habitable zone of the red dwarf star Wolf 1069.

>Although the rotation of this planet, named Wolf 1069 b, is probably tidally locked to its path around the parent star, the team is optimistic it may provide durable habitable conditions across a wide area of its dayside.

>The absence of any apparent stellar activity or intense UV radiation increases the chances that Wolf 1069 b could have retained much of its atmosphere.

>With a distance of 31 light-years, Wolf 1069 b is the sixth closest Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone of its host star.

>Because of its favourable prospects regarding habitability, it is among a small illustrious group of targets, such as Proxima Centauri b and TRAPPIST-1 e, to search for biosignatures.

^1 A nearby potentially habitable Earth-mass exoplanet, Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, 3 Feb. 2023.

^2 D. Kossakowski, et al. The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs. Wolf 1069 b: Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone of a nearby, very low-mass star. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202245322

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Earguy t1_j768iai wrote

31 light years away. C'mon, start designing the probe!

85

SaulsAll t1_j768p14 wrote

How close is this to Wolf 359?

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Putin_Delenda_Est t1_j768uoe wrote

Probably a good way to get attention for your paper but tidally locked, red dwarf and a 16 day day orbit are probably not ideal.

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_ancienttrees_ t1_j76a20w wrote

You know where else is habitable? Earth. Maybe we should worry about the one planet we do have

−12

AthKaElGal t1_j76ax3a wrote

We do worry about the one planet we do have. Well, at least the scientists do. That doesn't stop us from exploring. Ofc people with small brains can't comprehend the idea that science isn't mutually exclusive and that we can do multiple things at once. Progress isn't linear and does not require we all focus on one thing.

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jpheeney t1_j76ju12 wrote

But not habitable across a wide area of its nightside?

2

HarkansawJack t1_j76kvuf wrote

Screw earth mass though. Let’s pick a planet with less gravity so we can have more fun.

7

Ixneigh t1_j76m97f wrote

Let’s look for atmosphere first.

8

tiger66261 t1_j76n4pi wrote

We'll develop a probe at half the speed of light, so it should reach the planet in roughly 60 years

50 years later

Ah christ I think the probe hit a random asteroid in deep space

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Jakocolo32 t1_j76o57t wrote

How do they know the name of it?

−2

hanlonsaxe t1_j76ywi8 wrote

It would be nice if we used different words for habitable for humans, and habitable for some kind of life in general.

But then no one would click. I guess that could be the title for the chapter in the 22nd century history book about this era.

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Liquidwombat t1_j774olr wrote

I feel like we really missed an opportunity here not calling it wolf 359

3

Seared_Beans t1_j7770js wrote

More health issues than we can quantify, that's why a huge part of manned spaceflight has been relentlessly studying the effects of reduced G's on the human body. To say the least, EVERYTHING starts to go south after just months in a reduced g environment, we don't know how bad it will get or how lethal it can be upwards of several years

8

Seared_Beans t1_j779rr2 wrote

Generational projects, and methods of keeping socio political issues from derailing it all. That will be hard with a species so focused on immediate profits. Generation projects of this magnitude don't pay off quick, I don't know many rich folk interested in doing things that won benefit them before they kick the can

20

nclh77 t1_j77b12g wrote

Yay, keep destroying our planet now that we have planet B.

4

exkallibur t1_j77f86m wrote

Can we name that planet "Earth" and change our name to "Wolf"?

8

Ezekiel_29_12 t1_j77pjo9 wrote

No, but its day is essentially the same as its year, so the sun wouldn't appear to move in the sky, and the planet has a day side and a night side and the lack of light changing would be a tiny irritation. But if you colonized it you'd sleep indoors anyway and artificial lighting would provide a normal sleep cycle.

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Seared_Beans t1_j77sbch wrote

My guy, it won't be aristocracy. It's gonna be rampant space imperialism, you know, like we do every single time we find resources in mass ripe for the taking. Hording resources, and controlling planets in the solar system is gonna end up being their goal. They will have no interest in a project that won't make profit for 200-500 years. This ain't months without profit, this is lifetimes of investment with no gaurentee of a return (because we don't have a clue how possible this really is) the conquest of the solar system is far more likely (and we've already started it) than an interstellar one in the near to distant future. And money is already being made in it

4

Varsect t1_j781p00 wrote

Tidally locked planet.

Cool story bro. Wonder what kind of human can survive that.

2

marketrent OP t1_j783met wrote

>Putin_Delenda_Est

>Probably a good way to get attention for your paper but tidally locked, red dwarf and a 16 day day orbit are probably not ideal.

Top-level comment may indicate user(s) who do not read comments preceding theirs.

From the linked summary^1 for D. Kossakowski, et al.,^2 in my excerpt comment:^3

>Although the rotation of this planet, named Wolf 1069 b, is probably tidally locked to its path around the parent star, the team is optimistic it may provide durable habitable conditions across a wide area of its dayside.

>The absence of any apparent stellar activity or intense UV radiation increases the chances that Wolf 1069 b could have retained much of its atmosphere.

^1 A nearby potentially habitable Earth-mass exoplanet, Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, 3 Feb. 2023.

^2 D. Kossakowski, et al. The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs. Wolf 1069 b: Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone of a nearby, very low-mass star. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202245322

^3 https://www.reddit.com/r/science/comments/10te3ex/newlydiscovered_earthmass_exoplanet_named_wolf/j767v94/

9

Purple_Passion000 t1_j784mr2 wrote

Wonderful. Meanwhile it matters not to the many issues we face on Earth. Navel-gazing at its finest.

−1

nembajaz t1_j785krx wrote

Without UV it's practically naked to cosmic rays.

1

timberwolf0122 t1_j78gq0l wrote

Well, interstellar probe travel should be possible before then, but humans are leaving the solar system anytime soon without some revolution in tech.

One day we will make it, probably in massive several km long O’Neil cylinders powered by nuclear drives able to scavenge interstellar gasses.

First though we should be looking get a dyson ring round the sun to solve power needs

3

libginger73 t1_j78p1q5 wrote

I have always wondered about planets that rotate slower or faster and if that would affect things like sleeping and aging etc. I suppose your body gets tired after x hours of waking so yes artificial lighting and black-out curtains could help, but in place very far north, it's well known that we simply don't do well in limited day or night environments. Still would be interesting to see if we ever get to be interplanary!

2

marketrent OP t1_j78zbhx wrote

>hanlonsaxe

>It would be nice if we used different words for habitable for humans, and habitable for some kind of life in general.

>But then no one would click. I guess that could be the title for the chapter in the 22nd century history book about this era.

Who is ‘we’?

Do you mean that the majority of users in r/science may not read linked content, or excerpts in comments?

Do you also mean that such users need in-title explanations for scientific words?

0

Rex--Banner t1_j78zedi wrote

But then 30 years later we will have a Probe that goes twice as fast as that one and then we design a Probe that is double the speed of that one and they will get a cool Probe first and each Probe after will get worse with less information that's outdated.

1

AfterLemon t1_j793dqv wrote

The real problem here is that so many of the uninformed don't realize that there are hundreds or thousands of scientists that specialize in each individual section of science.

There are maybe 10 popular climate scientists that make headlines, but maybe 1 that might make headlines for some hopeful half-invented article.

But there are definitely hundreds of scientists that spend their entire career (30y270d8h= 65000 hours) each focusing entirely on each of these sciences.

1

Memetic1 t1_j79r2n4 wrote

Venus is right next door, and if you don't mind not living on the ground it's pretty habitable given our current technology. You can make graphene from co2, and then you could use that graphene to build more habitat. The sulfuric acid also isn't as much as a problem as people make it out to be. Sulfuric acid H2So4 which is just 2 waters bonded by a sulfur atom. If you have sufficient electricity sulfuric acid can be turned into water. It even has phosphorus which is essential for all life.

If you want to surf the skies Venus would be the target.

16

MarkHirsbrunner t1_j79zfmq wrote

Red dwarfs are redder than our sun, but they aren't really a color anyone would describe as red. Their surface temperatures are around the same as the filament of an incandescent lightbulb or hotter, which means it would be about the same color as an old fashioned light bulb.

3

CarpeDiem96 t1_j79zihk wrote

And at night blistering cold winds that blow diamond dust at Mach 1 speeds and giant arachnid parasites that melt you with acid slowly as they digest you and rip you apart.

2

Violated-Tristen t1_j7a66zt wrote

Sure… but it’s in the same system as Wolf 359 and we KNOW that’s where the Borg show up; So… keep looking?

1

Tobias_Atwood t1_j7allh2 wrote

Humans have had an insatiable urge to explore, chart, and colonize every square inch of habitable land for as long as we've been humans.

The morass of space will not stop us. We will spread and claim and consume until we have conquered every last bit of empty of space in the galaxy. Even if it takes us a million years.

5

Tobias_Atwood t1_j7am051 wrote

Honestly it isn't even about our long term survival.

Humans want to explore and expand and grow. They think there's a place they can go to set up shop they're gonna go whether it's a good idea or not.

2

Memetic1 t1_j7bx7xb wrote

They are sending a few missions to Venus. One of them even utilizes a balloon to stay in the upper atmosphere for an extended period. I would rather see crewed missions to Venus then Mars. Mars has dozens of ways to kill you while the environment in the clouds of Venus is comparatively simple. The only thing that would give me real pause is if we discovered life on Venus.

9