Yeah they picked up the same reading on Venus which was later disproved. The headline is also somewhat misleading in that this planet is 9 times larger than earth (not sure what it’s mass is) so it wouldn’t accommodate humans but still it would be incredible to reconfirm results
Different molecule on Venus. That was phosphene.
This time they found Dimethyl sulfide
A planet 9 times the size of earth could still potentially host human life, we'd need to live high up in the sky so the gravity would be lower, but it's possible
That's not how gravity works.
Gravity becomes lower at higher altitudes, or what do you mean?
The bigger aplanet, the further away its surface from its center of mass, which decreases gravity. A planet's surface gravity is mostly affected by its mass and density. This is why Saturn, despite being much bigger than Earth, still have roughly the same surface garvity.
Yeah they picked up the same reading on Venus which was later disproved. The headline is also somewhat misleading in that this planet is 9 times larger than earth (not sure what it’s mass is) so it wouldn’t accommodate humans but still it would be incredible to reconfirm results
Different molecule on Venus. That was phosphene.
This time they found Dimethyl sulfide
A planet 9 times the size of earth could still potentially host human life, we'd need to live high up in the sky so the gravity would be lower, but it's possible
That's not how gravity works.
Gravity becomes lower at higher altitudes, or what do you mean?
The bigger aplanet, the further away its surface from its center of mass, which decreases gravity. A planet's surface gravity is mostly affected by its mass and density. This is why Saturn, despite being much bigger than Earth, still have roughly the same surface garvity.
The planet is pretty close to it's sun.