32 New Planets In Other Solar Systems Are Discovered Reveal How Planets Are Formed Life Apart From Us

32 NEW PLANETS IN OTHER SOLAR SYSTEMS ARE DISCOVERED - REVEAL HOW PLANETS ARE FORMED - LIFE APART FROM US

32 new Planets are discovered in 2009 The smallest is five times the size of the earth

This picture taken in January 2009 illustrate the eksoplanet HD80606b which is around 200 lightyears away from earth. European astronomers disclosed that they had discovered 32 new previously unkown eksoplanets orbiting other stars than our own sun. Photo: Scanpix/AFP PHOTO / NASA / Spitzer Space Telescope

HD 80606 b is a superjovian planet (Eccentric Jupiter) 190 light-years distant in the constellation of Ursa Major. The planet was discovered orbiting the star HD 80606 in April 2001 by a team led by Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz. Based on its mass, at 4 times that of Jupiter, it is a gas giant. Since the planet transits its star, its radius is determined to be at 73,560 km (slightly larger than planet Jupiter).

The planet has wild variations in its weather as it orbits its parent star. Computer models predict the planet heats up 555 °C (1,000 °F) in just a matter of hours triggering "shockwave storms" with winds that move faster than the speed of sound

In the atom’s fizz and pop we heard possibility
uncorked. Taffeta wraps whispered on davenports.
A new planet bloomed above us; in its light
the stumps of cut pine gleamed like dinner plates.
The world was beginning all over again, fresh and hot;
we could have anything we wanted.
—Lynn Emanuel (b. 1949)

European astronomers have up till now discovered 32 previously unknown plants orbiting other stars than our own sun. The number of eksoplanets is then up to over 400 at the moment.

The smalles of the newly discovered eksoplanets is around 5 times the size of the earth, while the largest is around 5 times larger than our solar system planet Jupiter which is the largest plant in our own solarsystem.

This was revealed at a statement given by the European Space Agency astronomers this Monday.

The astronomers stated that more than 40 percent of the stars looking like our own sun have planets with small masses.

The new observations have given the astronomers a large insight into the variety of planet systems. Nuno Santos, one of the project researchers stated that this helps us to understand how planets are formed- De nye observasjonene har gitt astronomene stor innsikt i planetsystemets mangfold.

Gardening, as compared to lawn care, tutors us in nature’s ways, fostering an ethic of give and take with respect to the land. Gardens instruct us in the particularities of place. They lessen our dependence on distant sources of energy, technology, food, and, for that matter, interest. For if lawn mowing feels like copying the same sentence over and over, gardening is like writing out new ones, an infinitely variable process of invention and discovery. Gardens also teach the necessary if rather un-American lesson that nature and culture can be compromised, that there might be some middle ground between the lawn and the forest—between those who would complete the conquest of the planet in the name of progress and those who believe it’s time we abdicated our rule and left the earth in the care of its more innocent species. The garden suggests there might be a place where we can meet nature halfway.
—Michael Pollin, U. S. author, journalist, editor. “Why Mow? The Case Against Lawns,” repr. In Best American Essays 1990, Ticknor & Fields (1990)

The astonomers used HARPS, which is a special designed instrument at the European observatory in Chile to map the new eksoplanets.

This instrument gives the researchers the chance to calculate the size and mass of objects observed and discovered in the Universe.

HARPS WEB SITE 

HARPS is a spectrometer dedicated to the search for extrasolar planets by means of the technique of precise radial velocity measurement. HARPS is developped by a consortium headed by the Geneva Observatory. It is installed at the Coude room of the 3.6 meter telescope at La Silla, with an optical fiber link to the Cassegrain focus.

He has a background as civil engineer and geoscientist. He has worked mainly within the oil and gas industry from the mid 1980s. He has written a few fictional novels as well as being the author of some professional litterature within oil and gas sector, he is now an editor of some web sites.

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