When we finish our business on Earth, this is how our new home will look like
When we finish our business on Earth, this is how our new home will look like
Anonim

Sooner or later, humanity will understand that it is time for it to move on. And just as a child leaves his parents, as animals leave their flock, as a seed flies away in the wind from a native flower, so humanity will leave our world and move to a new planet. And this is how it will look.

When we finish our business on Earth, this is how our new home will look like
When we finish our business on Earth, this is how our new home will look like

In general, the list of potential planets suitable for resettlement looks like this:

main-qimg-4bd1dc049f501486c8dbb80a49573620
main-qimg-4bd1dc049f501486c8dbb80a49573620

The planets are sorted by similarity to Earth and Mars. It can be noted that the group of planets of the Gliese system is the most suitable for us for resettlement. That's what awaits us there.

The Gliese planetary system is illuminated by three suns. This is how artists see the sunrise at Gliese 667Cd.

eso-planets-1
eso-planets-1

The largest star in the picture is Gliese 667C. It is her system that the planets of our probable home in the future belong to.

Green zone - planets suitable for settlement. Not too cold and not too hot for humans
Green zone - planets suitable for settlement. Not too cold and not too hot for humans

We will also see two more stars in our new sky: Gliese 667A and 667B. In the photo below, they are in the center. Given the current technical capabilities of telescopes, they cannot be separated.

Our new Suns - Gliese 667A and Gliese 667B
Our new Suns - Gliese 667A and Gliese 667B

And of course, the view of our future planets in comparison with the Earth. They, like our Motherland, are covered with water clouds.

3 planets are our future homes
3 planets are our future homes

And I would like to end with the sunset of a new sun - Gliese 667C - on our new planets, which, perhaps by some miracle, we will be able to see at least in the NASA astronauts' Instagram feeds.:)

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