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The possibility of earth-like life on the planet Gliese 581 C

The other day, the front page of CNN.com regaled for all of five hours in the announcement that an international team of scientists had found a planet that could potentially support life. The Time-Warner company can be forgiven for its short attention span: these days, exoplanets, as they're called, are more of a waiting game than a media draw.

The planet, whose catchy name is Gl 581 c, circles a red dwarf, and was discovered by a team led by Stphane Udry of the Geneva Observatory in Switzerland. The planet that caused the momentary stir is about 20.5 light years distant. For perspective, if you wanted to drive your car at the standard freeway speed, it would take you a little over 2 billion years to get there. I suggest carpooling.

Despite that, however, it circles one of the ten closest stars to our own, and provides our first look at an earth-like planet. The truly extraordinary thing about Gl 581 c is that it rests contently in that sweet spots scientists have named the "habitable zone", meaning that water could exist in a liquid form. That orbit is also sometimes called the "Goldilocks Zone" because it is neither too hot nor too cold for life to thrive.

So, if the discovery of Gl 581 c is so interesting, why did it get buried so fast? Part of it has to due with the fact that it was replaced by a juicier (i.e., more horrific) story, but there is another reason that has its roots in the nature of public opinion.

The excitement over life beyond earth has had a rough history. Spurred by new technology that has given us the ability to investigate planetary systems farther and farther beyond our own atmosphere - and in more detail - the question of whether or not we are alone in the universe has come tantalizingly close to our grasp on several occasions. The world shook in 1996 when it was first announced that life on Earth may have actually traveled here from Mars. Then it shivered when Europa, the second moon of Jupiter, proved to have a thin crust of ice covering its surface. Upon the discovery of Gliese 581 c, it fluttered as a few people finally released the breath they had been holding.

The reason for this is partially due to an impatience resulting from the hyperbolic expectations that are often spun from scientific announcements. There is an enormous gap between what might exist and what does exist, a gap that is not always acknowledged when important discoveries such as this occur. Science publicists, such as Carl Sagan, have worked for decades to combat


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

The possibility of earth-like life on the planet Gliese 581 C

  • 1 of 11

    by Bran Herbert

    The other day, the front page of CNN.com regaled for all of five hours in the announcement that an international team of

    read more

  • 2 of 11

    by Lawrie Williams

    Gliese 581C is reportedly 50 percent larger and 5 times the mass of our planet. It is in a tight orbit around a red dwarf

    read more

  • 3 of 11

    by Ted Sherman

    Astronomers just discovered a fuzzy, tiny image of a planet that has many of the same features found on Earth. Oceans, atmosphere,

    read more

  • 4 of 11

    by Bryan Liddiard

    20 Light years sounds like a long way. However in galactic terms Gliese 581c is our next door neighbor. A relatively small

    read more

  • 5 of 11

    by Joseph Jusinski

    I think the possibilities of life on the planet Gliese are so great. I am so glad that they found a planet that is so similar

    read more

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The possibility of earth-like life on the planet Gliese 581 C

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