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I dont mean mars or any other planets but worlds that people cant acess.what im saying is that i believe but do you believe in diffrent worlds.but did you ever make your own world in the process?

2007-10-12 07:56:23 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

5 answers

Everything science tells us basically says that we are not special. We orbit an ordinary star in an ordinary part of an ordinary galaxy. so our 'ordinary' star has at least 9 planets that we know of.

Unfortunatly the circumstances of a habitable planet appear less ordinary.
1) the right amount of elements in the original elemental cloud (nebula) we were formed from.
2) a stable orbit (8 planets in stable orbit! +CHARON and PLUTO)
3) a Jupiter sized object to help stablize the entire systems orbit and draw in large deadly comets (sho3maker Levy!)
these comets could hit us or throw us off orbit, jupiter took it like a man tho!
4) a Moon which theoretically also deflected many early possibly extinction type events. (asteroids) just look at the other side of the moon, its got ten times the craters that our near side has.
5) no supernova events within our sphere of existence for billions of years or more.
this list goes on forever.

But, around some of our nearest stars we have already discovered planets in orbit. We can tell by a faint wobble or a drop in luminocity as the planet eclipses the star.
Unfortunatly we can barley detect planets larger than jupiter and we have to be pretty close to do this. For this reason, yea i believe each star in the universe *could* have 10 or more planets in orbit. the likelyhood that other life has arisen seems pretty certian if we really are that ordinary. the real question is how many times and how much space (and time) inbetween each arival. Other advanced Intelligent civilizations could have arose, evolved, triumphed, crumbled, and eventually died out, all this could have happened a billion years before earth even formed. If we start talking about other life tho, we really have to assume that its either just us, or its everywhere. All we really have to do is find one example of exogenesis and we can fairly safely assume there are intelligent aliens somewhere. Its just so so so so so so so so so much space (and time)!

2007-10-12 08:02:11 · answer #1 · answered by AlCapone 5 · 0 0

Not if I can't go there at all (neither literally or figuratively). In that case it is irrelevant. No reason to waste time on it.

That does not mean that Alice's Wonderland or Narnia or the Star Trek Universe or The Battle of Trafalgar are not real to me. I can go there in my imagination and learn important lessons for real life in these imagined or historical worlds.

But I am not sure that was your question? I can surely sense that you are trying to ask something important, but I can only give my own personal answer to it. How much my answer relates to you depends a lot on how much we think alike ... or don't.

2007-10-12 15:08:49 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Saturn's largest moon Titan,has water on the planet which is (-260)degrees which my sustain life

2007-10-12 17:58:51 · answer #3 · answered by ASA 2 · 0 0

yes I believe there are different worlds we are not yet aware of.

And to Al Capon, nice disertation, but there are only EIGHT planets. Pluto recently lost that official designation.

2007-10-12 15:35:33 · answer #4 · answered by Mike 7 · 1 1

yes

2007-10-12 14:59:28 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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