The planets in our solar system that are considered to have the potential to sustain life, primarily due to their temperature and conditions, are Earth and potentially Mars. Earth has the right temperature and atmosphere to support a wide variety of life forms. Mars, while cold and harsh, has shown evidence of water and could potentially support microbial life under certain conditions. Other celestial bodies, like some of the moons of Jupiter and Saturn, may also have subsurface oceans that could harbor life, but they are not classified as planets.
Yes, the planets temperatures do have something to do with the life that exists on the planet because mostly Uranus's temperature is -210 °C. In this type of weather the life that could exist has to be a fur covered species so that it can survive the temperature conditions on the planet.
No, the fact that there is life on earth does not prove that there is life on other planets because earth has many characteristics which allow for the sustaining of life, such as a sufficent water supply, an atmosphere, oxygen, a distance from the sun which keeps us at a temperature which is not too hot nor too cold to sustain life, among many other reasons.
If a star system has planets, the availability of oxygen on a given planet is a complicated process. If the planet is of the correct size and in the ecosphere of the star, the production of oxygen will occur through the existence of plant life that will convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. In a primordial planet like an earth, oxygen is not going to be an element that is naturally occurring. The compound carbon dioxide is. It takes plant life to produce an atmoshpere that will sustain animal life.The odds of this happening in a given star system are low, but possible.
The word for able to sustain life is "viable."
There is no Planet Goldilocks. The term "Goldilocks planet" refers to any planet that orbits in the habitable zone of its star, which is the area where a planet might be the right temperature to support liquid water, which might be able to sustain life. While we have discovered several such planets orbiting stars other than the sun, we currently do not have the technology to determine if they support life. Earth, which is itself a Goldilocks planet, is still the only planet known to support life.
mars and earth
Yes, Earth
The outer planets does not have enough oxygen to sustain life, or they don't have an atmosphere at all.
121 °C
So far, earth is the only planet known to support life, but many scientists thing that life probably exists on other planets.
Yes, the planets temperatures do have something to do with the life that exists on the planet because mostly Uranus's temperature is -210 °C. In this type of weather the life that could exist has to be a fur covered species so that it can survive the temperature conditions on the planet.
atmosphere
There are no planets but the planet Jupiter has a moon called Europa that is covered in ice and might have a ocean full of life.
You need water to live and other planets don't have water
it helps maintain the temperature of the earth.
No, the fact that there is life on earth does not prove that there is life on other planets because earth has many characteristics which allow for the sustaining of life, such as a sufficent water supply, an atmosphere, oxygen, a distance from the sun which keeps us at a temperature which is not too hot nor too cold to sustain life, among many other reasons.
As of right now, we have no ways of discerning what planets we can live on, let alone what galaxy we can live on. In order to sustain life, the planet in any galaxy would have to be like Earth - similar in temperature, gravity, not to mention the ozone layer and a rocky surface.