but how was that figure arrived at? Plus, does seeing the exact same figure many times on the internet make it any more true?Romie wrote:but Spiff it is said on many places that the size is around 1.5 times of Earths radius
One suspects a wet-finger-in-the-air guess, copied and pasted right across the internet. Note too that that radius implies a mean density of 3.2 times water. So, one would have to question what 'fluff' can exist on this rocky/metallic planet when it's supposedly "too hot / too small" for an atmosphere?
The only 'serious' reference I see on that wikipedia page is Mayor's, but I've been trying to download that PDF for three days now without success: it always stalls at 67%. I'm therefore left guessing that the quote "it is unlikely to possess an atmosphere due to its high temperature, small size, and strong radiation from the star." is either made up there on Wikipedia by whoever wrote it, or a quote from a semi-informed journalist.Romie wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gliese_581_e -says "it is unlikely to possess an atmosphere due to its high temperature, small size, and strong radiation from the star." so no atmosphere no clouds then....
Hmm, let's see (getting detailed!). Earth's escape velocity is 11.2km/s. R.M.S. velocity of a CO2 molecule by Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution is around 0.43km/s, so CO2 is slow to escape. If 'e' has the mass and radius I say (1.94 and 1.18 times Earth's respectively), then its escape velocity is 1.28 times higher: 14.3km/s. Let's allow 'e' a really hot atmosphere: 1,000K. Then the R.M.S. velocity of a CO2 molecule there is 0.79km/s. That's because R.M.S. velocity only goes up by the square root of absolute temperature. OK, 0.79/14.3 = 0.055, more than 0.43/11.2 = 0.038. However, running the same calculations for Venus (750K), I get 0.68/10.3 = 0.066, that is, Venus has a higher fraction of fast CO2 molecules than 'e'. This is oversimplified of course, because it's exosphere temperature that matters, but you see: it's not a given that 'e' can't keep a thick atmosphere.
For the arithmetic, you are certainly correct (I hope mine is too!). It's that '1.5' figure that's very likely wrong. So it's not you that is wrong, it's whoever came up with that '1.5' figure!Romie wrote:correct me if i am wrong
'e': Been there. The beer was too warm...Romie wrote:I just want to visit those exo-worlds and want to find out how life evolved there
'd': Been there too. My beer glass blew away in the wind!
Spiff.