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The ‘habitable zone’, also known as the ‘Goldilocks zone’, is the area around a star where conditions are just right for liquid water to exist on a rocky planet. It’s not too hot, not too cold. It is also key in the hunt for alien life, given that water is deemed necessary for life as we know it to evolve. This belt serves as a cosy home for our oceans, rivulets, and lakes in liquid form, thanks to Earth’s placement within this zone. The discovery of other planets that orbit in this habitable zone, particularly ones that are made out of rock, is currently a high priority across the planet-searching community.

NASA Explains the Goldilocks Zone: Where Planets Can Sustain Liquid Water and Life

As per NASA explanations, if Earth were shifted higher and closer in the solar system where Mercury is, surface water would start to evaporate, eventually boiling away into a steam-heavy atmosphere. If we took the Earth out to Pluto, by contrast, a permanent deep freeze would turn oceans and much of the atmosphere solid. This zone lies at the not-too-cold, not-too-hot region around a star where it receives enough stellar energy to keep water in its liquid state without causing it all to evaporate in endless heat or freeze into unyielding ice — a width that extends outward or inward depending on the size and heat output of the star.

Goldilocks Zones: Actually, this is more commonly known as a Habitable Zone. And, of course, where exactly that is depends on what kind of star you mean — cool, low-luminosity stars live much closer to the Sun and at lower temperatures; hot, high-luminosity stars shove that zone way out. A team of scientists is on the hunt for authentic exoplanets in this region.

Water is important for life on Earth and natural cosmetics. Subglacial systems influence climate and geological processes. Water signatures are important atmospheric features for exoplanet-watchers, influencing habitable assessment.

In the future, missions will search for exoplanet atmospheres and examine “biosignature” and biosphere signatures — possibly from plants — to see if life exists on habitable worlds.

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Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS May Originate from Milky Way’s Hidden Frontier, New Study Suggests

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A new study proposes that interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS may have originated in the thick disk region of the Milky Way, a lesser-known frontier beyond the spiral arms. Observations of its composition and trajectory support this possibility. Detailed telescopic messages from this visitor may help unravel the structure and evolution of our galaxy.

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ESA’s ExoMars Orbiter Captures Closest Images of Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS

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ESA’s ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter captured the closest-ever images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS as it passed Mars at 130,000 mph. The faint object revealed a gas coma but no tail. Believed to be billions of years older than our Solar System, the comet will exit after nearing Jupiter in 2026.

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Researchers Build Record 6,000-Qubit Quantum Machine That Works at Room Temperature

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A Caltech-led team has built a 6,100-qubit neutral-atom quantum processor that operates at room temperature with a coherence time of 12.6 seconds and 99.98% fidelity. The system also supports atom shuttling and error correction steps, bringing scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computing closer to reality.

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