The Times ran a
front page story about “the most Earth-like worlds yet known in the outer
cosmos, a pair of planets that appear capable of supporting life and that orbit
a star 1200 light-years from here, in the northern constellation Lyra” (“Two Promising Places to Live, 1200 Light-Years From Earth,” NYT, 4/18/13).
Naturally, perennially “space" conscious New Yorkers, with little experience of
trying to locate space in outer space, will wonder if there is rent
stabilization (before they even consider how stable the orbits of the bodies
question are)? According to the Times
both planets circle a star called Kepler 62 named "after NASA's Kepler 62 spacecraft, which
discovered them” and are both “in the ‘Goldilocks’ zone of lukewarm
temperatures suitable for liquid water, the crucial ingredient for Life as We
Know It.” The prospect of affordable space and the citation of Goldilocks
make the whole extraterrestrial discovery seem like a rather far flung fairy
tale. Indeed getting back to life on earth, hardened Manhattanites would find it
more improbable to come across an inexpensive rental than they would to
achieve the near speed of light velocities necessary for a rocket ship to get
there. But who knows what the future for space travel will hold. No one really
understands what space is either in terms of the dark matter that holds things together, nor the dark energy the force which constantly causes things to expand. In studying the Higgs Boson, a basic
component of matter, in the Large Hadron Collider scientists are only beginning
to understand what happened in the milliseconds following the explosion which
created life as we know it today. Did something come out of nothing? Or is
there another explanation that still eludes us? When we begin to understand
the highways and byways of space in the context of a unified theory which takes into context both the microcosm and
macrocosm, will we discover the wormholes that we read about in sci fi and that
will allow travellers to make quantum leaps through space/time?
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