We are not the only inhabitants of the Universe; in fact we are the lowest level of beings with wars, borders, crimes, etc. The Extraterrestrial life in other worlds does not have our degeneration.
NASA launched the Kepler observatory in March 2009 to seek out planets circling alien stars.
To do that, the spacecraft is staring continuously at a single patch of the sky, watching for tiny changes in the amount of light coming from every star it sees. Astronomers use other telescopes to follow up Kepler's findings in order to confirm whether or not the candidate stars do, in fact, host exoplanets.
To date, Kepler has discovered at least 50 billion planets only in our Milky Way galaxy, with 2 billion of those being about the size of Earth.
By other side scientists estimate that there are 100 billion galaxies in our universe, and an unknown quantity of other universes.
The NASA Kepler exoplanet team reports that there are 1,235 planets in our galaxy that could have Alien life, with 54 of those candidates located within the so-called "Goldilocks zone", not-too-hot and not-too-cold where life could exist. That just-right range of distances around a star in which liquid water could exist on a planet's surface.
A depiction created by Jason Rowe a NASA's Kepler mission scientist shows these 1,235 alien planets.
NASA launched the Kepler observatory in March 2009 to seek out planets circling alien stars.
To do that, the spacecraft is staring continuously at a single patch of the sky, watching for tiny changes in the amount of light coming from every star it sees. Astronomers use other telescopes to follow up Kepler's findings in order to confirm whether or not the candidate stars do, in fact, host exoplanets.
To date, Kepler has discovered at least 50 billion planets only in our Milky Way galaxy, with 2 billion of those being about the size of Earth.
By other side scientists estimate that there are 100 billion galaxies in our universe, and an unknown quantity of other universes.
The NASA Kepler exoplanet team reports that there are 1,235 planets in our galaxy that could have Alien life, with 54 of those candidates located within the so-called "Goldilocks zone", not-too-hot and not-too-cold where life could exist. That just-right range of distances around a star in which liquid water could exist on a planet's surface.
A depiction created by Jason Rowe a NASA's Kepler mission scientist shows these 1,235 alien planets.
The illustration shows those Kepler's planets crossing the face of their host stars. This provides scale. Kepler spacecraft detects alien worlds by measuring the telltale dips in a star's brightness that occurs during these planetary transits.
In Rowe's graphic, the parent stars of Kepler's alien worlds are arranged by size, with the largest at the top left of the diagram and the smallest at the bottom right. For reference, our own sun is shown sitting by itself, just beneath the top row. Jupiter is depicted transiting the sun in the illustration.
With this news NASA is preparing us to announce that there are a lot of inhabited planets even in our Solar System, and even with more advanced civilizations.
In fact Extraterrestrials are looking at the Earth because they know very well the terrible catastrophes that are going to suffer soon our planet, because of the Hercolubus (Planet X) inbound, and they are ready to help us in the End Times, rescuing any people that has a minimum conscience level in order that they are able to pass to the following mankind without contaminate them.
You only have to prepare yourself increasing your conscience level.
That is all.
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