All This Light Pollution Is Making It Real Hard To Find God T shirt
The majority of All This Light Pollution Is Making It Real Hard To Find God T shirt in the Milky Way, around 80%, are red dwarfs, small stars between about half the size of our sun and 10% the size of our sun. That still leaves between 40–80 billion stars much like the sun. If one in five of those has an Earth-like planet, that means there may be between eight and sixteen billion Earth-like planets in the Milky Way. Of course these numbers may be off. The number of sun-like stars may be lower, or higher. The number of Earth-like planets may be more, or less. We just can’t know, so far. Further, there is no reason to assume that only stars like our sun will have planets capable of supporting life. Or that only a planet will support life. There may be intelligent life on a large moon of a gas giant exoplanet in the “Goldilocks zone” of a red dwarf. There is also no way to know how typical the Sol system is with it’s eight planets, half of which are ice or gas giants, and half of which are small rocky planets like Earth. Most of the exoplanets we know about are gas giants like Jupiter, just because they are easier to detect. Remember, we haven’t actually “seen” any exoplanets. We only know they are there by the way their gravity affects their home stars, causing a wobble, or they are aligned with Earth such that the transit of the planet between Earth and its star causes the star to flicker. Small, rocky planets like Earth are just harder to find. So there may be lots of them, or not. We just don’t know, yet.
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Getting in a little closer, there are individual “bodies of All This Light Pollution Is Making It Real Hard To Find God T shirt ” identified around Australia. The Timor Sea and Arafura Sea lie to the north/northwest of the continent, between Australia and Indonesia. The Gulf of Carpentaria eats out that section between Cape York Peninsula and the Northern Territory, covering an area of over 115,000 square miles. Across the top between the tip of Queensland (Cape York) and Papua New Guinea is the Torres Strait. This thin strip of water is only 150 km (93 miles) across at its narrowest point. Moving east, the Coral Sea (1.85 million square miles) covers the area along the northeast coast, encompassing the Great Barrier Reef. Perhaps you’ve heard of the Battle of the Coral Sea, an important engagement during World War II between the Allies (US+Australia) and Japan; this is largely where it took place (further out to sea, for the most part). Between Australia and New Zealand lies the Tasman Sea. The narrowest distance between the two countries is 1,491 km (926 miles), measuring between the extreme geographic points. (So, no, NZ is not as close to Australia as a lot of people might think; a flight from Auckland to Sydney takes about 3 hours and 45 minutes, about the time to fly from Los Angeles to Minneapolis).