Plate tectonics
Polymers
Post-perovskite
Press, Bill
Proteins
PSR 1257+12
Queloz, Didier
RNA
Rivera, Eugenio
Rose, Gustav
Saturn
Scale
large-molecule
Schroedinger, Erwin
Seager, Sara
Selsis, Franck
Silica
Silicate
Silicon
Silicon carbide
SLiME
Spectrum
Spectroscopy
Spores
Sulfur dioxide
Sunspots
Super-Earths
definition
discovery
habitability
models (interior)
models (atmosphere)
transiting
Super-Mercury
Super-Moon
Super-Venus
Synthetic biology
Synthetic genomics
Szostak, Jack
Tectonic plates
Telescope
Timescale
Todorov, Tzvetan
Torres, Guillermo
Transit timing variations
Transit planet candidates
Tree of life
Uranus
Valencia, Diana
Venter, J. Craig
Venus
transit of
Vesicles
Ward, Peter
Water
ice
iceand
Watson, James and Crick, Francis
Whitney, Charles
Wickramasinghe, Chandra
Wobble,
See
Method, astrometry, Doppler shift
Wolszczan, Alex
a
Angular momentum is the product of mass, velocity, and size of a rotating body; left on its own, the body will conserve its angular momentum. If its size is shrinking, the body has to rotate faster to compensate for the decrease in size. The mass of gas and dust that surrounds a young star shrinks toward it while orbiting around it and attains a flat disk shape.
b
Here I use the word “mass.” The mass of an object measures the amount of stuff (atoms or matter) in that object. Mass and gravity are interrelated: the strength of the force of gravity depends on the massâa more massive body exerts a stronger force (or pull). Colloquially, we often say weight or heavy, instead of mass or massive. This is imprecise and leads to confusing statements, so I'll insist on saying mass and massive.
c
Walt Whitman's poem “When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer” has upset generations of scientists, as they will tell you that math does not keep them from looking up in awe at the stars.
d
Note the new term I have introduced: “scale.” In astrophysics this term means a characteristic rangeâof size, or of time, energy, and so on. For example, we speak of a galactic scale (sizes of 10
20
to 10
25
m) versus a quantum scale (sizes of 10
â10
to 10
â15
m); and we use shorthand notationâpowers of tenâto write those very large (or very small) numbers.
e
The definition of system as a combination of related elements organized into a complex whole is what I use here to refer to life for a lack of a better word.
f
A network is a pattern of branching and interconnected lines, circuits, things, and so on; the pattern does not have to be ordered.
g
An isotope occurs when the atomic nucleus of the same element (same number of protons) has a different number of neutrons.
Copyright © 2012 by Dimitar Sasselov
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Published by Basic Books,
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Illustrations by Sandra L. Cundiff and Michael Hardesty
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sasselov, Dimitar D.
The life of super-Earths : how the hunt for alien worlds and artificial cells will revolutionize life on our planet / Dimitar Sasselov.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
eISBN : 978-0-465-02340-0
4. LifeâOrigin. 5. Life on other planets. I. Title.
QH326.S27 2012
576.8'39âdc23
2011036888
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