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Can we live on other planets?

This article digs deep into the idea of living over other planets. Can human beings live on other planets?

By Niraj KCPublished 2 years ago 5 min read
Can we live on other planets?
Photo by Daniel Olah on Unsplash

The idea of life on other planets has always been a mystery to science. Currently, Earth is the only planet where human beings survive. There is less to no probability of human beings to survive on any other planets with help of no special equipment. On the other hand, if the star were too hot, radiation would quickly disperse the solar nebula, leaving smaller planets with no atmosphere or system of millions of tiny asteroids. If it were too cold, the protoplanet's atmosphere would not be destroyed, which could lead to the formation of a planet system similar to Jupiter, but much larger and much larger. If the formation of planetary systems and the decline of astronomical rotation are the result of the presence of solar nebulae, then the hot stars that disperse their solar nebulae and do not form planets should be expected to orbit rapidly.

The planet's orbit around the sun means that the sun is 176 days long, so cities can move in the right direction to stay in the shade at all times. Although such a close orbit may sound like a source of catastrophe, after all, Mercury takes 88 days to orbit the sun, and the minimum Proxima Centauri, magnitude, and low temperatures mean that the planet can be inhabited under ideal conditions. Even the farthest planet is only 1,400,000 miles [1,400,000 km] from its birth star.

For example, at the time of writing, some 25 million miles [40 million km] from Earth's surface are Mars, the coolest planet Earth with no oxygen at all. The man who was sent to Mars was shaking and dying, as many other creatures are known. Today, Mars has a very small, dry atmosphere composed of almost all carbon dioxide.

Then, just last year, scientists discovered another planet-like planet orbiting one of the closest stars, Proxima Centauri. This planet is currently the best candidate to support human life. For us humans to live hundreds of billions of years, we must eventually fill other planets. There is no way to know if there is or will be another planet that supports life beyond Earth, people have to wait and see what the scientific discoveries will reveal to them.

In the endless universe, many scientists agree that the potential for life on any planet other than Earth is very high. Of all the planets in our solar system, only the earth is known to support life. However, after scientists have analyzed others, some of them demonstrated their ability to support life, but perhaps in a way, we had never experienced before. The planets most likely to support life include Mars, Europa, Enceladus, and Titan.

The Earth Biosphere contains all the known ingredients needed for life as we know it. The earth provides the stable ecosystems that make up the planet. Extreme weather, atmospheric chemicals, and the vast amount of resources needed to sustain human life all play a role. Life on other planets would likely be possible if they had these supporting mechanisms that help living things to survive.

And that assumes that life on another planet would be exactly like what happened here, which is not what most astronomers think. I think the idea that life begins here is arrogant.

They will probably go back thousands of years. They will not want to plunder us for resources because there are many uninhabited planets like Mars that they can plunder without having to deal with restless natives like us.

They wrote that, if so, the planet should be the first human destination to discover the existence of other living things in the universe. Most likely to survive will be small planets, with rocks like Earth. Healthy people will also take what scientists call a habitat, the place where the farthest planet from its parent star makes liquid water.

The Kepler mission, a space observatory launched by NASA in 1997 to search our galaxy to find planets like Earth, has found a candidate who meets both paths, the Kepler-452b. At least 22 planets outside the solar system may be more suitable for life on earth. These planets are slightly older, slightly watery, slightly warmer, and larger than Earth, researchers wrote on September 18 in the journal Astrobiology.

But there are also many planets in the galaxy, or “right” range, which prefers higher temperatures that are neither too hot nor too cold for life to improve. However, let's imagine we can get there. Several exoplanets have been found in the habitat (at the right distance from the stars to support liquid water and possible life-forms). We can go to a few possible planets, some of which are much better than others.

Here is a road map for life on another planet. Fear of the weather, the possibility of an existing catastrophe, and a search of resources mean that one day travel between planets will be required, if not too late. Amid the turmoil on Earth, scientists have found the hope of life on another planet. Scientists have been studying the planets for more than 50 years, including looking for evidence of past or present life. NASA has conducted a study called HOPE (Revolutionary Concepts for Human Exploration of the Outer Planet) regarding the future exploration of the solar system.

Our first planetary observatories, such as NASA's Kepler and its extended birth, K2, or the future James Webb Space Telescope, could provide little evidence of the uninhabited earth. However, the discovery of thousands of planets orbiting nearby stars has greatly reinforced speculation that some kind of life could exist on a planet outside our solar system. Keck scientists have determined that 22% of the sun's galaxies in our galaxy have as many planets as possible in the solar system and can sustain life.

The planet is thought to be between Mars and Earth in size. It receives the earth's radiation levels from its star, at about the same temperature. There is another reason to believe that hot stars do not have planets. For example, the Kepler 10b is another exoplanet in our solar system that is nearly the same size as the Earth but closer to its star for human habitation.

The planet is probably the mass of the Earth and orbits a solid 11-day orbit around its star. The planet had a radius of 2.4 times that of the Earth and was 600 light-years. According to models by Boruka and his colleagues, the Kepler-22b was thought to have the same temperature as Earth.

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    NKWritten by Niraj KC

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