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Could this be the first direct image of an exoplanet?
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:16 am
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:16 am
This is an older article from 2016, but I've never seen this image before and its significance, if confirmed, is amazing.
LINK
This could be one for the history books, the first ever direct image of a planet not in our solar system.
quote:
European Southern Observatory (ESO) officials say this could be the first star system discovered to have both a close-in exoplanet and another one that is far-out. “If it is confirmed that CVSO 30c orbits CVSO 30, this would be the first star system to host both a close-in exoplanet detected by the transit method and a far-out exoplanet detected by direct imaging,” ESO officials.
LINK
This could be one for the history books, the first ever direct image of a planet not in our solar system.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:19 am to SidewalkDawg
How many generations would it take to get there?
1,200 light-years away
1,200 light-years away
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:19 am to SidewalkDawg
This is absolutely amazing.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:26 am to SidewalkDawg
It's making me kind of dizzy/lightheaded to attempt to comprehend how far away that is. We are so tiny & insignificant. Very cool.
This post was edited on 9/6/17 at 8:27 am
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:29 am to Eli Goldfinger
quote:
How many generations would it take to get there?
1,200 light-years away
Since a generation is the average amount of time a group of people are born and grow up, say about 30 years, and a light year is a measurement for distance, your joke makes no sense.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:47 am to SidewalkDawg
No, not the first ever. In fact not even close. The article states it is the first to be imaged that is both a) far away from its host star and also b) that host star has a second but closer planet that was detected by the transit method.
Here's a list of other directly imaged planets. The earliest on that list was imaged in 2004 ( article with picture).
Here's a list of other directly imaged planets. The earliest on that list was imaged in 2004 ( article with picture).
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:50 am to foshizzle
quote:
No, not the first ever. In fact not even close. The article states it is the first to be imaged that is both a) far away from its host star and also b) that host star has a second but closer planet that was detected by the transit method. Here's a list of other directly imaged planets. The earliest on that list was imaged in 2004 ( article with picture).
I assumed "Direct imaging" in this instance was with no infrared filters, and just using visible light.
I could be wrong though.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:52 am to Eli Goldfinger
quote:
How many generations would it take to get there?
Depends on how you travel. 1200 light years is extremely close compared with many other stars but extremely far away for us.
If you could get a ship going up to near light speed then time slows down for the travelers. Go fast enough and they could arrive within their own lifetimes. Hell they could go there and come back within their own lifetimes. But over 2400 years would have passed here on Earth.
It's the same effect as was shown in the movie "Interstellar" although there the effect was triggered by being deep in a powerful gravity well. Time dilation is experimentally verified to be real though.
Edit: One of several ways that it's been verified is to take a bunch of radioactive nuclei with a known and very short half-life. Use a particle accelerator to get them going very very fast. Measure their half life, which turns out to be much longer. The difference is as Einstein predicted.
This post was edited on 9/6/17 at 8:54 am
Posted on 9/6/17 at 8:56 am to SidewalkDawg
quote:
European Southern Observatory (ESO) officials say this could be the first star system discovered to have both a close-in exoplanet and another one that is far-out. “If it is confirmed that CVSO 30c orbits CVSO 30, this would be the first star system to host both a close-in exoplanet detected by the transit method and a far-out exoplanet detected by direct imaging,” ESO officials.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 10:09 am to foshizzle
quote:
Go fast enough and they could arrive within their own lifetimes. Hell they could go there and come back within their own lifetimes. But over 2400 years would have passed here on Earth.
Insane to think about. Would not want to come back to earth 2000+years later. Probably not even 100 years later. No telling what kind of freaky shite would be going on by then.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 10:45 am to Eli Goldfinger
quote:
How many generations would it take to get there?
1,200 light-years away
It can actually be traveled instantly.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 11:37 am to RummelTiger
quote:
...or a streetlight.
That's the star, the exoplanet is the small dot to the upper left of it.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 11:40 am to SidewalkDawg
What is an exoplanet
Sorry I'm not a nerd
Sorry I'm not a nerd
This post was edited on 9/6/17 at 11:40 am
Posted on 9/6/17 at 11:43 am to GreatLakesTiger24
It's just a term to describe planets around stars other than our own.
Posted on 9/6/17 at 12:06 pm to foshizzle
quote:
If you could get a ship going up to near light speed then time slows down for the travelers. Go fast enough and they could arrive within their own lifetimes. Hell they could go there and come back within their own lifetimes. But over 2400 years would have passed here on Earth.
that scares the shite out of me
Posted on 9/6/17 at 12:09 pm to SidewalkDawg
quote:
I assumed "Direct imaging" in this instance was with no infrared filters, and just using visible light.
The first such was Fomalhaut B in 2004.
This post was edited on 9/6/17 at 12:10 pm
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