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  • To date we've confirmed 1,821 planets outside of our solar system. In 1989, there were zero.

  • And I think it's fair to say, we've learned a few things since then.

  • Hey planetoids, Trace here for DNews. In 1584, a Catholic Monk, Giordano Bruno claimed

  • there were "countless suns and countless Earths." More than 400 years later, in a 1995 book

  • on exoplanets three scientists wrote, "The detection and study of Earth-like planets

  • outside our Solar System will be one of the great scientific, technological and philosophical

  • events of our time." Because even with so much time in between, no earth-like planets

  • had been confirmed! A decade later, the first earth-like planet, Gliese 581 C, was discovered;

  • and as of March 2015, we've confirmed 29 water-holding habitable, earth-like planets; and calculations

  • say there might be BILLIONS more,. Do you feel like you live in the era of a huge scientific,

  • technological and philosophical event? You should!

  • There's a huge database of possible candidates and confirmed exoplanets, and as we observe

  • OTHER solar systems we're learning things about how OUR solar system works. New research

  • in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences used other solar systems as a

  • model for our own. Our solar system was formed from leftovers after the Big Bang, gas and

  • dust coalesced into planets over many many millions of years. OTHER solar systems have

  • supermassive exoplanets closer to their sun, but we don't. Scientists believe Jupiter was

  • the reason ours looks different.

  • They believe, Jupiter USED to be closer to the sun, and tacked outward, dragging all

  • the junk from the inner solar system with it. When the solar system first formed, there

  • were planetesimals, or small planetary building blocks, flying around in the inner solar system

  • where Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are now. While today, Jupiter orbits at about

  • 5 AUs, it used to range from 3 to 10! All that motion cleared the way like a wrecking

  • ball. It could have even destroyed any other proto-planets which formed before the four

  • inner planets we have now. This Wandering Jupiter hypothesis isn't the perfect explanation

  • for why we look different, but it hits a lot of checkboxes on the way to a good theory.

  • Keeping an eye on the sky has also helped us feel a little less alone. A study in the

  • Astrophysical Journal found Kepler 444, a solar system which has five Earth-like planets

  • orbiting it in a way very similar to our own -- AND it's 11.4 billion years old, meaning

  • those planets were formed long before ours and are relatively similar in size. The problem

  • is, they're too close to their star, orbiting in only around 10 days -- Mercury orbits in

  • 84 days. So, while 444 doesn't have life, it shows planets can form really FAST, and

  • that's USEFUL because there might be life-capable planets with a billion-year head start on

  • us out there!

  • The Kepler telescope was launched in 2009 to search for exoplanets and, in case you've

  • forgotten, KEPLER is BROKEN and is STILL finding them. The Milky Way has between 100 and 400

  • billion stars -- that's a lot of places to point a telescope. The more we learn, the

  • more scientists can make educated guesses and point telescopes at the right stars. It

  • might be blazé to say it, but I'm pretty sure, finding other planets really is the

  • most scientific, technological and philosophical event that you never think about. And we really

  • should think about it more, because it teaches us so much about our own!

To date we've confirmed 1,821 planets outside of our solar system. In 1989, there were zero.

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