by Denyse O'Leary
ARN correspondent
Here's the abstract of a just-published paper:
Nature 470, 438 (24 February 2011) doi:10.1038/470438bDespite the pop science media's tendency to reach for gee whiz adjectives, many are laudably resisting a temptation to which Carl Sagan certainly succumbed at times, to write as though desired finds were just around the corner because ... well, because otherwise we would seem too important. See, for example, "Hostility to life is norm for exoplanet, senior astronomer says" and "Immanuel Kant, meet Carl Sagan and Frank Drake.NASA's Kepler mission to find habitable planets orbiting Sun-like stars has turned up its first rocky planet. The project uses the Kepler space telescope to identify extrasolar planets by watching for dips in the intensity of light from up to 170,000 target stars.
Natalie Batalha of San Jose State University in California and her group spotted Kepler 10b, which is about 4.56 times the mass of Earth. Although similar in size to Earth, its orbit lasts just 0.84 days, making it likely that the planet is a scorched, waterless world with a sea of lava on its starlit side.
Or do they fear that funding would be cut? That seems unlikely because the public worldwide likes the show anyway. With apologies to Phantom of the Opera,
The whole cast disappears.But the crowd still cheers
Which is as it should be. The trouble begins if some insist that the phantom is really an alien being.
(Note: The Nature paper costs US$32.)
Denyse O'Leary is co-author of The Spiritual Brain.
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