There is potentially over 8 [b]billion[/b] planets capable of life in [b][i]our galaxy.[/i][/b]
[quote] By extrapolating Kepler’s findings, astronomers have come up with some not-altogether-unfounded estimates for these values. For instance, they concluded that about 22% of Sun-like stars has at least one planet we class as potentially habitable. Doing the math based on the latest estimates for the total number of stars in the Milky Way, that gives us a rough figure of 8.8 billion potentially habitable planets in the Milky Way. That’s a lot of rolls of the dice, assuming you believe life has any chance at all of starting spontaneously. [/quote]
That's just our galaxy people. There's hundreds of billions of galaxies in our universe. That's a lot of potential for life. We're not special snowflakes.
[url=http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/170404-kepler-20-of-sun-like-stars-have-habitable-planets-alien-life-drake-equation-finally-has-a-leg-to-stand-on]source[/url]
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Edited by lMGPl_Mister_K: 5/28/2015 12:39:38 AMWe've known this for a while, it's old news...., it's moronic to think that there are over 100 billion galaxies, each containing about a trillion stars, and those stars all have a chance to harbor planets, and you think that not one of them has conditions ideal for life, life as we see it on earth is not the only type of life tht is possible, I'm sure there are beings out there that the human couldn't hope to possibly comprehend in any way, people that life has to be similar to us in order to exist, this closed mind set is usually what leads to the simple answer of we are alone, perhaps the first beings we come into contact with may not even see things the same way as us or even live in the same dimension, it's not impossible to Think that in the lifetime of the universe, a species evolved to exist perhaps in the time dimension and are able to travel through time the same way you travel around in the 3 spacial dimensions you exist in