Do you think I could just leave this part blank and it'd be okay? We're just going to replace the whole thing with a header image anyway, right?
You are not logged in.
Pages: 1
We're getting our first good characterizations of terrestrial exoplanets lately. First, news broke of a possible planet around the nearest star to our Sun, Proxima Centauri. Then, we explored TRAPPIST-1, a mini solar system just 39 light-years away. Now, researchers from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics announced the discovery today of a possible super-Earth orbiting an M-dwarf star just 34 light-years away. The discovery was published in the April 20th Nature.
LHS 1140b is a tantalizing find. Its cool, red host, LHS 1140, contains only 15% the mass of our Sun and is at least 5 billion years old. The planet passes in front of its star once every 15 days as seen from Earth. Jason Dittman (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) and team combined discovery data from the MEarth project with radial-velocity measurements from the High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS) survey.
So what do you guys think about it? Do you think this is true? Or false?
tfw wen u made another account just because you forgot your pass
Offline
how am i suppose to know idk i dont know why are you posting things that we dont really talk about and that we dont know about this is more like a gameing forum not a science forum find out for your self by asking your teacher at school or search it up online on google do you know her? jk that was a joke to confuse you that you thought google was a she
Offline
i dont know why are you posting things that we dont really talk about and that we dont know about this is more like a gameing forum not a science forum
How do you know that there aren't people interested in stuff like this?
Offline
Pages: 1
[ Started around 1732684565.793 - Generated in 0.264 seconds, 12 queries executed - Memory usage: 1.39 MiB (Peak: 1.5 MiB) ]