Exoplanet Census Suggests Earth Is Special after All
A
new tally proposes that roughly 700 quintillion terrestrial exoplanets
are likely to exist across the observable universe—most vastly different
from Earth
"But the average age of these planets—well above Earth’s age—and their
typical locations—in galaxies vastly unlike the Milky Way—just might
turn the Copernican principle on its head.
"But Max Tegmark from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who also
was not part of the research, thinks Earth is a colossal violation of
the Copernican principle..."
-and-
Planck Satellite Confirms WMAP Findings: Universe is not Copernican
The Modern World is Faced with the Breach of a Far Reaching Paradigm
"The question is ‘what will modern science do now’? Will they invent
additional parameters to keep the current theories alive (in addition to
those already added: dark matter, dark energy, redshift as expansion,
big bang inflation, etc.) or will they consider the possibility that we
are in a special place as observations clearly indicate?"
-and-
Do We Live in a Giant Cosmic Bubble?
"This idea that we live in a void would really be a statement that we live in a special place," Clifton told SPACE.com. "The regular cosmological model is based on the idea that where we live is a typical place in the universe. This would be a contradiction to the Copernican principle."
"This idea that we live in a void would really be a statement that we live in a special place," Clifton told SPACE.com. "The regular cosmological model is based on the idea that where we live is a typical place in the universe. This would be a contradiction to the Copernican principle."
-and-
Do We Live in a Giant Cosmic Bubble?
"This idea that we live in a void would really be a statement that we live in a special place," Clifton told SPACE.com. "The regular cosmological model is based on the idea that where we live is a typical place in the universe. This would be a contradiction to the Copernican principle."
"This idea that we live in a void would really be a statement that we live in a special place," Clifton told SPACE.com. "The regular cosmological model is based on the idea that where we live is a typical place in the universe. This would be a contradiction to the Copernican principle."