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Here's a rather thought provoking video from the Hubble Space Telescope.
There are hundreds of billions of galaxies in the known universe, each with hundreds of billions of stars.
To put that in perspective, a hundred billion is 10^11. Multiply by another 10^11, and you get 10^22 suns.
If Earth like planets are so rare that only one sun in a billion has one, that's still 10^13 earth like planets.
The US national debt is on the order of tens of billions, or 10^10
The number of pennies in the US national debt, then, is on the order of 10^12.
So, if only one sun in a billion has an Earth like planet, there are still ten of them for every penny of the national debt.
Here's a rather thought provoking video from the Hubble Space Telescope.
There are hundreds of billions of galaxies in the known universe, each with hundreds of billions of stars.
To put that in perspective, a hundred billion is 10^11. Multiply by another 10^11, and you get 10^22 suns.
If Earth like planets are so rare that only one sun in a billion has one, that's still 10^13 earth like planets.
The US national debt is on the order of tens of billions, or 10^10
The number of pennies in the US national debt, then, is on the order of 10^12.
So, if only one sun in a billion has an Earth like planet, there are still ten of them for every penny of the national debt.
Here's a rather thought provoking video from the Hubble Space Telescope.
There are hundreds of billions of galaxies in the known universe, each with hundreds of billions of stars.
To put that in perspective, a hundred billion is 10^11. Multiply by another 10^11, and you get 10^22 suns.
If Earth like planets are so rare that only one sun in a billion has one, that's still 10^13 earth like planets.
The US national debt is on the order of tens of billions, or 10^10
The number of pennies in the US national debt, then, is on the order of 10^12.
So, if only one sun in a billion has an Earth like planet, there are still ten of them for every penny of the national debt.
Now would the combined mass of those 10^12 pennies equal the mass of the sun?
20^11 ?
Since they're all on Earth, and the Earth is a lot smaller than the sun, I'd say, no.
There may be a lot of earth like planets, but that doesn't mean they have a earth like atmosphere.
Just a small rise in CO2 on the order of 2% could make their air unbreathable and I sincerely doubt we'll ever develope the warp drive technology to reach one.
Here's a rather thought provoking video from the Hubble Space Telescope.
There are hundreds of billions of galaxies in the known universe, each with hundreds of billions of stars.
To put that in perspective, a hundred billion is 10^11. Multiply by another 10^11, and you get 10^22 suns.
If Earth like planets are so rare that only one sun in a billion has one, that's still 10^13 earth like planets.
The US national debt is on the order of tens of billions, or 10^10
The number of pennies in the US national debt, then, is on the order of 10^12.
So, if only one sun in a billion has an Earth like planet, there are still ten of them for every penny of the national debt.
Between 10 and 22 suns? LoL, I can see more than 22 suns in the night sky. This guy must be a right-wing creationist.
Oh oh. I just spotted an error in my math. See if you can find it too.
Did you mean 100 of them for each penny?
These kind of numbers make you realize that intelligent life HAS to exist elsewhere. It's too improbable that it doesn't.
Oh oh. I just spotted an error in my math. See if you can find it too.
I do not see an error in your math, but there is an error in your figures - if that is what you are driving at. National debt is ~$16 trillion, not "tens of billions".. so since you went with the nearest power of 10 for your figures multiply your stack of pennies by another 10^3.
So there is a dollar of national debt for every habitable planet (using your figures)
An atmosphere that is 2% carbon dioxide may not be
breathable for Earth organisms, but for the ones that evolved locally, it might be just right.
Between 10 and 22 suns? LoL, I can
see more than 22 suns in the night sky. This guy must be a right-wing creationist.
With more suns than grains of sand on the beach, somewhere there must be other intelligent life.
LOL !!
Whats wrong ? That Atlanta public education didn't pay off ?
Scientific notation a bit too abstract for your liberal brain ?
Its funny to hear libs come down on Conservatives for being stupid as they expose just how unknowledgable they are about.....well everything.
The Op was refering to the amount of suns likely to have earth like planets in their orbit.
And since I have a good feeling you have no idea what it is you're staring at when you look into the night sky, let this CONSERVATIVE educate you a bit.
You are seeing everything from active stars to dead stars long since depleted of their fuel.
Your'e seeing planets,( Mars and Venus) and you're seeing light arriving from stars not even in existence anymore.
You're seeing the edge of the milkyway Galaxy,( best seen in the Southern Hemisphere ) ....uhm do I need to explain THAT TOO ? and the Magellanic cloud.
This Conservative is a big fan of science and mathematics.
Maybe you should get a decent education before embarrassing yourself again.
That's one theory with absolutely zero evidence to support it.
Should we list more?
Sure, be my guest. You mean, more theories with no evidence behind them, or more reasons to simply dismiss the speculation about how unlikely it is that this one planet out of hundreds of trillions is the only one supporting life?
That's one theory with absolutely zero evidence to support it.
Should we list more?
the evidence is the mathematical probability
If life is so prolific, why is it that on the one place we KNOW is suitable for life to arise it's only happened once?
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