Earth's "New" Cousin

Topic by uchibenkei

Uchibenkei

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This topic contains 17 replies, has 12 voices, and was last updated by Puffin Stuff  Puffin Stuff 4 years, 6 months ago.

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  • #88394
    Uchibenkei
    uchibenkei
    Participant
    7965

    I think we need more threads about cool s~~~ going on in the world of men so I’m going to start sharing stuff I think is cool.  Meet Kepler 452B.

    Article

    I bathe in the tears of single moms.

    #88411

    Anonymous
    1

    When is the next spaceship for this planet? Cause Im in. 🙂

    #88417
    +1
    3.14
    3.14
    Participant
    54

    most likely dead

    its sun is 1.5 bln years older than ours so most likely if that planet had life it had it around  the Precambrian of our world even back in time to be more precise

    If lets say they evolved life on superior stages and if they managed to transmit in outerspace they did it like 500-750 mln years ago. most likely we will never get the chance to get our hands on that transmission.

    also 1400 light years away. that will ne 2800 years for a full recieve/send combo of transmission

     

    but we can let our imagination roam free. i hope after i die my spirit will be pure energy and i can put wormhole in universe and visit every place till eternity 🙂

     

    #88424
    +2
    Uchibenkei
    uchibenkei
    Participant
    7965

    Ha ha.  I’ve always hoped for the exact same afterlife.  Explore space as a “spirit”.

    I bathe in the tears of single moms.

    #88441
    RoyDal
    RoyDal
    Participant

    I grew up reading science fiction. The idea that we can travel faster than light (like Star Wars) is a wonderful fantasy. I truly hope it comes true.

    Society asks MGTOWs: Why are you not making more tax-slaves?

    #88443
    +1
    Uchibenkei
    uchibenkei
    Participant
    7965

    if we achieved light speed, i wonder if the government would set up speed limits in space and try to profit from that.  ha ha ha

    I bathe in the tears of single moms.

    #88562
    MENGINEER
    MENGINEER
    Participant
    583

    To believe that all the millions+ stars out there don’t have a planet that COULD support life would be an uneducated theory.

    If extraterrestrials actually did contact the human race in a way that couldn’t be covered up (Roswell) think what would that do to organized religion?

    If Kepler was found I wonder if the scientologists found their planet yet? 🙂

    #88582
    Exsliventxs
    Exsliventxs
    Participant
    1067

    I was always confused with how relativity would work in games where you can go the speed of light or faster…

    If I’m a space explorer, and I’m trying to report back to Earth instantly, I’ll either have to use quantum entanglement or rely on a set speed of transmission…

    For example..

    If I go 7mins at the speed of light and then report s~~~ back to earth, like flight of the navigator, time will have greatly elapsed on earth..

    I never understood how you could have any real conversation with anyone on earth, since as soon as you went warp X … everyone on earth that you knew is dying or long since dead.

    This is not even taking into account that sending a message when you’re 10000000 light years away exploring a new whatever, by the time the message was received at home, you’re reporting back to a different species.

    Hard for me to get into Sci-fi when such huge issues are present.  Worm holes that allow instantaneous travel and some sort of instantaneous communication? Even then you’d have to report back to the wormhole or generate your own. You could never really accomplish anything otherwise. My understanding of astrophysics may be horrendously wrong here, but that’s the way I’ve understood the Twin Experiment and relativity.

    #88741
    Edog
    Edog
    Participant
    254

    I’m sorry guys, but to me, the logistics on this stuff is so ridiculously beyond comprehension it’s laughable to think that we can possibly assume what anything that is that far away could possibly be like.

    Just 1 light year is about 6 trillion miles, or 6,000,000,000,000 miles. Now, multiply that by 1,400.

    It’s incomprehensible! Now way you’ll convince me that NASA knows anything about anything that far away. Ridiculous.

    I’m a conspiracy theorist though so of course, I don’t trust NASA at all. Far too many hoaxes and anomalies exposed to not be a skeptic, and that’s  aside from them being government funded and tied to the Military Industrial Complex. NASA is a part of the delusion if you ask me. Does anyone have a clue how much funding goes into these projects? It’s OUR MONEY! There are people starving and at war being brutalized as we speak, and thirsty people who don’t have water. But these douchebag corporate globalists and bankers divert trillions of dollars because they want to weaponize space to use against us, but meanwhile, sell you stories of other “Earths” which gives reason for though of life on other planets. Which in turn, gives reason to think there could actually be aliens. Which means in turn that this is now a global issue, and needs to be addressed on a global scale. Just as planned.

    They’re playing a game with people. There is a great delusion coming and many will be convinced of a lie. We are simply not capable of anything even remotely or fractionally close to what it would take to comprehend the amount of time and space that separates us from other solar systems, galaxies…etc. We can barely comprehend magnetism and gravity, yet we’re pondering things thousands of light years away? We can’t stop killing our own kind and we’re pondering if there are “other Earths” out there? What about the one we’re on? Can we focus on it for a while? I mean I’m all for exploring space and gaining knowledge and all that, but to me with the way I perceive the world, most of this stuff is diversionary. I don’t see how it’s justified to spend as much money as we do on gaining knowledge about space when we can’t even figure out our own damn planet.

    #88760
    Lord Vats
    Lord Vats
    Participant
    379

    When is the next spaceship for this planet? Cause I’m in.

    When we’ve invented immortality AND spaceships that can travel at the speed of light.

    Most likely dead

    Not necessarily. An older star doesn’t mean that the planet is inhospitable, or the life on it is extinct.

    Also 1400 light years away. that will need 2800 years for a full receive/send combo of transmission

    We’d need more. Sound doesn’t travel at the speed of light, light does.

    if we achieved light speed, i wonder if the government would set up speed limits in space and try to profit from that.  ha ha ha

    Buddy, if we achieve light speed, the government would be f~~~ed. It wouldn’t be able to regulate the whole universe! Piracy days would be back, only difference that the pirates would travel in spaceships.

    If I’m a space explorer, and I’m trying to report back to Earth instantly, I’ll either have to use quantum entanglement or rely on a set speed of transmission…

    If you’re concerned about the logistics of message transmission, know this that we won’t be using sound or light for transmission. I guess there would be some kind of satellite interlinked on to several space stations.

    #88774
    Uchibenkei
    uchibenkei
    Participant
    7965

    Do we need immortality?  No love for the deep freeze?  scientists are working on the immortality issue though.  The guy who founded Google gives a lot of money for that research.

    I bathe in the tears of single moms.

    #88785
    Executor Maxwell
    Executor Maxwell
    Participant
    591

    BadKan wrote: When is the next spaceship for this planet? Cause I’m in.

    When we’ve invented immortality AND spaceships that can travel at the speed of light.

    Of those two only one would be need, … but holly hell if immortality is the on they pull off I’m gonna need more that a pack of playing cards.

    If I go 7mins at the speed of light and then report s~~~ back to earth, like flight of the navigator, time will have greatly elapsed on earth.

    Point of order. If that is from the relative perspective of earth than no only 7 minutes will have passed. If it is from your relative perspective while traveling the speed of light 7 minutes will never come to pass.

    3.14 wrote: Also 1400 light years away. that will need 2800 years for a full receive/send combo of transmission

    We’d need more. Sound doesn’t travel at the speed of light, light does.

    Sound does not travel though space at all, communications are sent by radio wave, which does travel at the speed of light though at that distance there are going to be additional signal degradation issues that will have to be dealt with. Voyager 1 is still working so far 18-20 hour transmission delay and all.

    #88790
    Lord Vats
    Lord Vats
    Participant
    379

    Do we need immortality?  No love for the deep freeze?

    Of course we do. There’s no super light speed, only light speed and sub light speed. If it takes light to reach that particular planet 1400 years, then it would take that much time for us too if we travel at the speed of light. As far as Deep Freeze is concerned, it always seemed boring time waste to me. If I could avoid sleep completely, I’d do that in my day to day life too. Immortality is not as far you think.

    Point of order. If that is from the relative perspective of earth than no only 7 minutes will have passed. If it is from your relative perspective while traveling the speed of light 7 minutes will never come to pass.

    He is concerned about the travelling time of message. He thinks that by the time message reaches earth, the species would be extinct. Hence, my felt need of immortality.

    Sound does not travel though space at all,

    Yep. Silly me, I totally forgot that sound needs a medium to travel.

    #88796
    JollyMisanthrope
    JollyMisanthrope
    Participant
    3356

    Mankind will eventually destroy itself, no matter what planet we inhabit. Though I’m not religious I like the quote from John Doe in Se7en. “We are not what was intended.”

    The Children of Doom... Doom's Children. They told my lord the way to the Mountain of Power. They told him to throw down his sword and return to the Earth... Ha! Time enough for the Earth in the grave.
    #88810
    3.14
    3.14
    Participant
    54

    Do we need immortality? No love for the deep freeze? scientists are working on the immortality issue though. The guy who founded Google gives a lot of money for that research.

     

    the transmision is not by sound waves. most likely they will transmit by light . still maybe there is a way you can open some wormhole and get the message to the  other part of the universe. Maybe even the message can dig a wormhole by itself and so on. But in the wormhole most likely the message must travel at light speed.(i dont see other way to get around the limitaion of the speed of light right now)

    #88421
    3.14
    3.14
    Participant
    54

    The planet takes 385 days to orbit its star.<sup id=”cite_ref-Overbye_6-0″ class=”reference”>[6]</sup> It is older and bigger than Earth, but lies within the conservative habitable zone of its parent star.<sup id=”cite_ref-Feltman_7-0″ class=”reference”>[7]</sup><sup id=”cite_ref-Witze_8-0″ class=”reference”>[8]</sup>

     

    It has a probable mass five times that of Earth, and its surface gravity is twice Earth’s, though calculations of mass for exoplanets are only rough estimates.<sup id=”cite_ref-Feltman_7-1″ class=”reference”>[7]</sup> If it is a terrestrial planet, it is most likely a super-Earth with many active volcanoes due to its higher mass and density. The clouds on the planet would be thick and misty, covering much of the surface as viewed from space. Kepler-452 would look almost identical to the Sun as viewed from the surface.<sup id=”cite_ref-9″ class=”reference”>[9]</sup>

    It is not known if Kepler-452b is a rocky planet or a small gas planet,<sup id=”cite_ref-RinconP2015_10-0″ class=”reference”>[10]</sup> but based on its small radius, Kepler-452b has a reasonable chance, between 49% and 62%, of being rocky.<sup id=”cite_ref-Jenkins2015_2-2″ class=”reference”>[2]</sup> It is not clear if Kepler-452b offers habitable environments. It orbits a G2V-type star, like the Sun, with nearly the same temperature and mass and 20% more luminous.<sup id=”cite_ref-Overbye_6-1″ class=”reference”>[6]</sup> However, the star is six billion years old, making it 1.5 billion years older than the Sun. At this point in its star’s evolution, Kepler-452b is receiving 10% more energy from its parent star than Earth is currently receiving from the Sun.<sup id=”cite_ref-Chou_4-1″ class=”reference”>[4]</sup> If Kepler-452b is a rocky planet, it may be subject to a runaway greenhouse effect similar to that seen on Venus.[1

    #88836
    Burgundy
    Burgundy
    Participant
    1525

    Well Since the new Earth 2 is a bit older by a billion years, the Fermi Paradox applies very well here.

    http://waitbutwhy.com/2014/05/fermi-paradox.html

    Chances are, intelligent life never evolved on that planet, or hasn’t done so yet, or maybe it’s but one of a billion planets like it, that has all it takes for life and so forth, that nothing special is about it at all, except whoever is down there aren’t really interested about the other billions of earth like planets, like us. Or it could be that it’s in the “back end” of where whoever is there, would go, and the star cluster we are in, is considered, the ghetto.

     

    Hell maybe we are but one of many zoo planets, with a “Do not trespass” sign on it, lol.

    #88844
    Puffin Stuff
    Puffin Stuff
    Participant
    24979

    Could we ship feminists there? They don’t understand STEM subjects and might be persuaded that a feminist paradise sans patriarchy awaits them.

    See, problem solved.

    #icethemout; Remember Thomas Ball. He died for your children.

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