Oldest planet *ever* found
Posted by Anon on Mon 14 Jul 2003 - 17:07
Scientists have just found the oldest planet in the known universe, and likely anywhere else for that matter -- 12.7 BILLION years old, quite literally almost as old as the universe itself. It's a Jupiter-size monster, and the folks who found it are both excited and very startled by their find. This may change a lot of thinking as to just how long life has been around, as the discoverers claim this proves it may well have had an Earth-like companion originally. You can read more here.
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A few points of clarification:
Existence of life is extremely unlikely, as it requires heavy elements in at least trace amounts, as far as we know.
Heavy element synthesis by supernovae would not have occurred substantially, as the massive stars that burned out that soon after formation would have had their heavy-element cores swallowed during collapse into the resulting black hole (only less massive supernovae produce neutron stars). The shell blown off would be mostly hydrogen and helium.
So, the real puzzle is how a planet formed from only the primordial elements.
I hope this is interesting to at least a few people reading }:>. Subject came up and was discussed at length on slashdot a little while ago.
I was especially amused by the "proves it may" comment. How can one prove something 'might' exist? :)
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