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Scientists Hope to Discover Watery Planets by Looking at Our Own

Explore how researchers now detect water on distant planets using Earth as a model with the Deep Impact spacecraft.

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Water is crucial to the only kinds of living things we've ever seen, so the presence of the wet stuff on another planet could be a sign of potential life. Unfortunately, scientists have been unsure how to detect water on distant planets. But the Deep Impact spacecraft has recently given researchers a glimpse of what a wet planet looks like from far away by turning its detectors onto the Earth itself. Essentially, Deep Impact has turned Earth into a case study of a planet replete with water. The spacecraft, which is 30 million miles away, or halfway to Venus from Earth, has shown scientists how overlapping continents and bodies of water alter the way that light of seven different wavelengths reflects off of the planet's surface.

When scientists observed light from Earth twice over a 24-hour period, they found small deviations in colour caused when clouds or oceans rotated into ...

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