An international team has confirmed the discovery of a super-Earth orbiting in the habitable zone of a nearby sun-like star. The planet was originally detected two years ago by Oxford University scientist Dr. Michael Cretignier. This result, drawing on more than two decades of observations, opens a window to future studies of Earth-like exoplanets that may have conditions suitable for life.
Ugh.
Okay, tangent. When I was in grad school for planetary science, literally every grant application had “search for water” in it because that was how you made your grant sexy to PHBs at granting agencies. Later, when water became so common everywhere in the solar system, it switched to things like methane. The treadmill continues.
This is the version of that for exoplanets. And it screams of junk science marketing to appeal to granting agencies and bad click-bait reposting. It drives me nuts.
You could say this about just about any exoplanet out there if you stretch the definition of life wide enough.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gell-Mann_amnesia_effect
Too true. I don’t know how many articles like this I’ve read over the last few years. The title suggests with weasel-words that an Earth-like paradise planet capable to supporting carbon/water based life has been found.
But then when you dig into the details there’s always one or more catches that complicate things. Things like:
I’ve wondered why the habitable world spin is picked up so much. That makes a lot of sense that it’s being promoted to help get funding for post-graduate studies.