Please help us to find bad videos. Broken or unappropriated video content?
Like this content? Please consider becoming a patron:
The search for exoplanets began more than 30 years ago and once evidence for these objects began to accumulate, the number of confirmed planets has increased dramatically. As the surveys and searches continue, the plethora of types of exoplanets also has become fascinatingly diverse. Having discovered the "Hot Jupiter" type of planets, researchers now looking for smaller and colder objects. Taking a lesson from our own solar system, it does appear that things that might qualify as planets elsewhere might be moons in our own system. Take for example Saturn's moon Titan, and also Jupiter's moon Ganymede. These objects may harbor water and conditions conducive to life. What if we found such objects around other stars? We probably would call them planets if they orbited the star rather than a large gas planet. What is it that qualifies an object as an exoplanet and what types of distant objects might actually be able to support some sort of life?
Join Tony Darnell and Carol Christian during Afternoon Astronomy Coffee on April 12 at 3PM Eastern time as they discuss with Juan Lora (UCLA), Tiffany Kataria (JPL), and Peter Gao (UC Berkeley) how they are creating models of such objects to understand the atmospheric characteristics and chemistry of exoplanets that have more uncommon with the moons of our solar system than the objects we call planets.
Read more:
/
Deep Astronomy Discord Server:
Follow DeepAstronomy on Twitter:
@DeepAstronomy
Like DeepAstronomy on Facebook:
/
Like Space Fan News on Facebook:
/
Fpvracer.lt is not the owner of this text/video/image/photo content, the real source of content is Youtube.com and user declared in this page publication as Youtube.com user,
if you have any question about video removal, what was shared by open community, please contact Youtube.com directly or report bad/not working video links directly to video owner on Youtube.com. Removed video from Youtube.com will also be removed from here.