Comments on: Planets with the highest likelihood of harboring life identified /news/2016/08/03/planets-with-the-highest-likelihood-of-harboring-life-identified/ News from the University of Hawaii Tue, 12 Feb 2019 00:41:58 +0000 hourly 1 By: Mr. Raymond Kenneth Petry /news/2016/08/03/planets-with-the-highest-likelihood-of-harboring-life-identified/#comment-587985 Wed, 03 Aug 2016 20:29:48 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=48329#comment-587985 The Kepler Habitable Zone Working Group is proving way-too-narrow-minded to be scientifically reasonable (beyond funding)— 1. The lack of atmosphere variabilities leaves rocky Earths both too hard and too soft, to be “Goldilocks Right:” Is the atmosphere of a bigger Earth sure to be too thin to warm life beyond its “Goldilocks Zone”… 2. Why are most published exoplanets high eccentricity: Is Kepler looking for only new sun systems, or is there a planetary option unmentioned stabilizing our own into circular orbits… 3. Is “Greenhouse Runaway” a guaranteed destruction, or only if forest fires span from an overheated equator onto rainforest poles… 4. If Mars had life billions of years ago then its atmosphere must have kept it warm enough to evolve in whatever time it had, so, why-not look at Mars-like planets beyond the outer fringe of their “Goldilocks Zones”… … …? ‘Where are the staunch-atheists, when we need them—I never thought we-Christians would need them, to Save Our Earth….’

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