Want this question answered?
The only planet on our solar system that resides withinthe Goldilocks zone is Earth.The planets that reside outside the Goldilocks zone are:MercuryVenusMarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune
Goldilocks Zone or Goldilocks Planet.
There is no planet called Goldilocks. You are thinking of the Goldilocks zone. [See related question]
Not sure what you mean by "deeper meaning" but if you are asking about the origin of the name Goldilocks, it derives from locks of gold. Locks is a term used for hair, and of course, gold is a color. The name Goldilocks means golden-haired, or hair of gold.
The 'Goldilocks Zone,' or habitable zone, is the range of distance with the right temperatures for water to remain liquid. Discoveries in the Goldilocks Zone, like Earth-size planet Kepler-186f, are what scientists hope will lead us to water––and one day life.
Neither. The goldilocks zone refers to a planet which is just the right distance from the Sun to retain water on it's surface. See related link for a pictorial.
no, goldilocks is a zone around a star where a planet with appropriate atmospheric pressure can maintain the liquid water on its surface
Because Gliese 581 g, if it exists, is located near the middle of the habitable zone (or Goldilocks zone - [See related question]) of its parent star.
Earth
The Goldilocks Zone, also known as the habitable zone.
The concept of the Goldilocks zone was proposed by scientists James Kasting, Dorian Abbot, and others in the 1990s. The idea is that it refers to the habitable zone around a star where conditions are just right for liquid water to exist on the surface of a planet.
Another word for life zone may be habitable zone (it's "habital zone" for creationists), goldilocks zone, and there might be more.