Geography
Is there another planet where life can exist ? If yes then give reason?
- Posted:
- 3+ months ago by Savitsingh
- Topics:
- life, planet, geography, planets
Responses (3)
This is mostly an opinion but with what ive read and learned astronomy wise i believe there is a planet out there with life. The universe is huge in a scale we are just a spec of dust in space, yes in our solar system we are the only planet with life because we are in the "goldilocks zone" where life can happen, not to far and not to close to the sun. Our galaxy itself contains billions of suns and those suns might have there own solar systems and within those solar systems might be a planet in the goldilocks zone and might have life. Now there are billions of galaxies with billions of suns with billions of other planets and so on so forth, so yes there might be a small slight possibility of another planet sith some type of life in it, even if its small bacteria or an alien civilization way more advanced than ours. But give it thought there might be a small chance but there is a chance the universe is a big and getting bigger but after all these are theories and some are proven to be true check out the latest news NASA discovered atleast 9 planets that are similar to Earth
We don't know of any example of life anywhere else. A lot of people pretend to know something, but they don't. A lot of people talk about chance, but life is not a chance event. Life is a black swan event: if you see one example, you know there is at least one example. But if you don't see one example, you don't know anything.
No Water—No Life
This is the conclusion reached by Professor Norman H. Horowitz, a scientist affiliated with the 1965-76 Mariner and Viking missions to Mars.
In his book To Utopia and Back: The Search for Life in the Solar System, Professor Horowitz noted that the findings from these missions clearly resolved the question of whether there is life on Mars or on any other planet in our solar system. “Mars,” he says, “lacks that extraordinary feature that dominates the environment of our own planet, oceans of liquid water in full view of the sun.” Research confirmed the planet’s lack of water.
After careful experiments eliminated every possibility of a life potential on Mars, Horowitz conceded: “The failure to find life on Mars was a disappointment, but it was also a revelation. Since Mars offered by far the most promising habitat for extraterrestrial life in the solar system, it is now virtually certain that the earth is the only life-bearing planet in our region of the galaxy.”
How fitting that, when writing about the earth, the ancient prophet Isaiah stated that its Maker “formed it even to be inhabited”! (Isaiah 45:18) Water is mentioned early in the Bible’s creation account. Clearly, providing water before the creation of any earthly life form was a necessity. As the missions to Mars have testified: Outside the spirit realm, where there is no water, there cannot be life.—Genesis 1:1-10
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