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  • One task, you have.

  • Find Baby Yoda, you must.

  • The tracking fob, guide you it will.

  • It sounds like an easy task.

  • But we wouldn't be scouring

  • the 50 million systems

  • of the Star Wars Universe.

  • We'd be doing it in our own galaxy,

  • the Milky Way.

  • Searching some 100 billion planets,

  • even in a starship equipped with hyperdrive,

  • would take you a lot longer

  • than your human lifetime.

  • Maybe, to find Baby Yoda,

  • you'd have to think like Baby Yoda.

  • If you were a 50-year-old toddler

  • with a taste for frogs, and

  • the ability to lift a charging mudhorn into the air,

  • "Help you I can."

  • Master Yoda?

  • "Use your feelings,

  • and find him you will.”

  • My feelings are telling me to start

  • with the world of jungles and swamps.

  • R2, set a course for Dagobah.

  • Baby Yoda could be all that's left

  • of Yoda's kind.

  • We don't know where his species comes from,

  • or even if they have a name.

  • So why go to Dagobah?

  • This planet might be harsh and humid,

  • but it's a perfect place to hide

  • from the Galactic Empire.

  • But as far as science goes,

  • a boggy planet, fully covered in marshlands,

  • is hard to come by in real life.

  • Bogs usually form in the lowlands,

  • and require more than the few

  • geographical features than Dagobah has.

  • Another impossible planet to find in the Milky Way

  • would be the cold gas giant, Bespin.

  • The gas giants we know of are

  • mostly composed of hydrogen and helium.

  • A planet like Bespin would be a poor source

  • of any heavy elements for mining,

  • and it would have an especially poor atmosphere

  • for Baby Yoda to breathe.

  • You could spend millennia searching

  • for a planet like that in the Milky Way,

  • and never find it.

  • But luckily for you, there are better places to look

  • for this little creature with a high midi-chlorian count.

  • Our next stop would be

  • a Milky Way version of Tatooine

  • In Star Wars, Tatooine is a hot, arid planet,

  • that's circling around not just one,

  • but two suns.

  • Real-life circumbinary planets of the Milky Way,

  • orbiting two or more stars,

  • are even harsher than that.

  • But because Kepler-16b lies

  • just outside of the habitable zone,

  • it's most likely a cold,

  • gaseous world the size of Saturn.

  • And it most certainly doesn't have what you're looking for.

  • But desert planets are not

  • that uncommon in the Milky Way.

  • We have one right here in our Solar System.

  • Desert planets could be hot,

  • like Tatooine or Jakku.

  • They can also be cold, like Jedha

  • or our own Mars.

  • The only problem is, is that so far,

  • we haven't found any indication of life

  • on those desert exoplanets.

  • We don't know if any of them could be inhabited by bacteria,

  • let alone Yoda's species.

  • And I would rather go somewhere more Earthly,

  • like the equivalent of the Republic's capital planet,

  • There are candidate planets for

  • a high-tech civilization to settle,

  • right here in our galaxy.

  • One of them, Kepler-452b,

  • is 1.6 times bigger than Earth,

  • and it's growing warmer every year.

  • If any advanced life forms were to inhabit this planet,

  • they would need to engineer the planet's climate.

  • I doubt that Baby Yoda would enjoy

  • a frozen wasteland like Hoth.

  • Its equivalent in the Milky Way,

  • a planet with the catchy name OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb,

  • has surface temperatures as low as -220°C (-364°F).

  • That's nearly as cold as Pluto.

  • But it could support life.

  • Just not anything big and

  • carnivorous like wampas.

  • Neither could a little one

  • like the planet called CoRoT-7b,

  • a volcanic planetary cousin of Mustafar.

  • This lava world sits 60 times closer

  • to its host star than the Earth is to the Sun.

  • The temperatures on CoRot-7b

  • reach as high as 2,200°C (4,000°F).

  • Maybe, you just have to look for the most

  • adorable planet in the Milky Way Galaxy.

  • Or maybe, you don't have to go far at all.

  • Scientists discover hundreds of new plant

  • and animal species right here on Earth every year.

  • And I'm hoping that one day,

  • they'll discover Baby Yoda.

  • And I hope it happens before he turns 900.

  • May the Force be with you always.

  • And while you're searching,

  • watch out for any Death Stars.

  • You never know who might have built one.

  • But that's a story for another WHAT IF.

One task, you have.

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ヨーダの赤ちゃんを見つけなければならなかったとしたら? (What If You Had to Find Baby Yoda?)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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