Detection of planetary systems and the search for evidence of life (original) (raw)
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- Published: 24 July 1986
Nature volume 322, pages 340–341 (1986)Cite this article
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Abstract
The Solar System is our only example of a planetary system, and the Earth is the only known instance of a planet harbouring life. The formation of planetary systems may occur commonly among stars like the Sun, but whether life arises frequently, rarely, or is a unique event is more problematical. Astrometric techniques capable of detecting major planets (similar to Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus) orbiting nearby stars are currently active1–4, but detection of an Earth-like planet is beyond current techniques. Direct imaging of planetary systems (refs 5, 6; B. M. Oliver, unpublished data) is even more challenging, and current opinion seems to have dismissed the possibility of imaging a planet as small as the Earth. The problem is not an impossible one, however: by combining radioastronomy and optical methods, images of Earth-like planets orbiting nearby stars should be obtainable, and their atmospheres could be studied spectroscopically for evidence of life.
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Authors and Affiliations
- Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02139, USA
Bernard F. Burke
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- Bernard F. Burke
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Burke, B. Detection of planetary systems and the search for evidence of life.Nature 322, 340–341 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1038/322340a0
- Received: 10 September 1985
- Accepted: 17 April 1986
- Issue Date: 24 July 1986
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/322340a0
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