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On even the tiniest adventure .....

11/17/2013

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In one sense, every life is lived somewhere along a continuum, with at one extreme such careful planning that nothing unexpected is ever encountered, and at the other chaos. 

My own life is somewhere on the chaos side. Planning and organizing for the future are definitely not my strong points. I'm at my happiest wandering, roaming, meandering, but also actively pushing through totally unknown situations and territory. It wakens me. And not only on the surface. I guess that over my lifetime I've trained my subconscious to get out there with me and help me see and understand and sort out the unknown. In any case I feel more alive. Whereas when I have to follow a set path or formula or way of living I feel maybe not dead but certainly repressed. 

We were visiting in Burlington recently. Midway through I wandered off, and luckily had my camera with me. 
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Urban Legends

11/4/2013

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Since we’ve taken up living in an apartment building, we don’t get visits anymore from the Jehovah’s Witnesses or Seventh Day Adventists. They seem like a thing of the past. Like Model T Fords. In those days, hearing their knock on the door was a regular thing. Others stood on the sidewalk with their ‘Watchtower’ magazines. True believers. Their lives in service to someone else. But they always seemed so calm. 

Well, the telephone is their new door. I just got off the phone after taking up about two hours of this woman’s time. Even though I was standing way over here on the evolution side of the canyon, she hung in there pretty good, probably because I told her I would never try to convince someone to leave their religion. She saw a little hope in that. A way in, maybe. I said the world is so full of horror, and not just out there in the world, but in our own lives if we have the open eyes to let it in, and all the moreso as we get older, that I would never try to argue someone out of the comfort and hope their religion gives them. They certainly wouldn’t find it in evolution. Evolution isn’t going to throw it’s arms around someone who is suffering and murmer sweet thoughts. It couldn’t care less. Suffer all you want. Die horribly. All it can do is remind you of the good days you had. A few laughs. A little sex. Hopefully it was okay. Some intimacy with another like you. A close feeling against the stress coming from everywhere else. And maybe you got caught up in something, like children, a friend, a job you actually liked, pop culture, a shooter computer game, an art. Maybe you created something.

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We're far from alone in this Galaxy!

11/4/2013

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Space is vast, but it may not be so lonely after all: A study finds the Milky Way is teeming with billions of planets that are about the size of Earth, orbit stars just like our sun, and exist in the Goldilocks zone — not too hot and not too cold for life.

Astronomers using NASA data have calculated for the first time that in our galaxy alone, there are at least 8.8 billion stars with Earth-size planets in the habitable temperature zone.

The study was published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

For perspective, that's more Earth-like planets than there are people on Earth.

As for what it says about the odds that there is life somewhere out there, it means "just in our Milky Way galaxy alone, that's 8.8 billion throws of the biological dice," said study co-author Geoff Marcy, a longtime planet hunter from the University of California at Berkeley.

The next step, scientists say, is to look for atmospheres on these planets with powerful space telescopes that have yet to be launched. That would yield further clues to whether any of these planets do, in fact, harbor life.

The findings also raise a blaring question, Marcy said: If we aren't alone, why is "there a deafening silence in our Milky Way galaxy from advanced civilizations?"

In the Milky Way, about 1 in 5 stars that are like our sun in size, color and age have planets that are roughly Earth's size and are in the habitable zone where life-crucial water can be liquid, according to intricate calculations based on four years of observations from NASA's now-crippled Kepler telescope.

If people on Earth could only travel in deep space, "you'd probably see a lot of traffic jams," Bill Borucki, NASA's chief Kepler scientist, joked Monday.

The Kepler telescope peered at 42,000 stars, examining just a tiny slice of our galaxy to see how many planets like Earth are out there. Scientists then extrapolated that figure to the rest of the galaxy, which has hundreds of billions of stars.

For the first time, scientists calculated — not estimated — what percent of stars that are just like our sun have planets similar to Earth: 22 percent, with a margin of error of plus or minus 8 percentage points.

Kepler scientist Natalie Batalha said there is still more data to pore over before this can be considered a final figure.

There are about 200 billion stars in our galaxy, with 40 billion of them like our sun, Marcy said. One of his co-authors put the number of sun-like stars closer to 50 billion, meaning there would be at least 11 billion planets like ours.

Based on the 1-in-5 estimate, the closest Earth-size planet that is in the habitable temperature zone and circles a sun-like star is probably within 70 trillion miles of Earth, Marcy said.

And the 8.8 billion Earth-size planets figure is only a start. That's because scientists were looking only at sun-like stars, which are not the most common stars.

An earlier study found that 15 percent of the more common red dwarf stars have Earth-size planets that are close-in enough to be in the not-too-hot, not-too-cold Goldilocks Zone.

Put those together and that's probably 40 billion right-size, right-place planets, Marcy said.

And that's just our galaxy. There are billions of other galaxies.

Scientists at a Kepler science conference Monday said they have found 833 new candidate planets with the space telescope, bringing the total of planets they've spotted to 3,538, but most aren't candidates for life.

Kepler has identified only 10 planets that are about Earth's size circling sun-like stars and are in the habitable zone, including one called Kepler 69-c.

Because there are probably hundreds of planets missed for every one found, the study did intricate extrapolations to come up with the 22 percent figure — a calculation that outside scientists say is fair.

"Everything they've done looks legitimate," said MIT astronomer Sara Seager.

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

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    Stan Burfield's Blog

    Organizer of London Open Mic Poetry. former support worker for people with autism and developmental disabilities.  former farm boy, former adventurer, former florist.
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