In the past few decades, thousands of extra-solar planets have been discovered within our galaxy. As of July 28th, 2018, a total of 3,374 extra-solar planets have been confirmed in 2,814 planetary systems. While the majority of these planets have been gas giants, an increasing number have been terrestrial (i.e. rocky) in nature and were found to be orbiting within their stars' respective habitable zones (HZ).
However, as the case of the Solar System shows, HZs do not necessary mean a planet can support life. Even though Mars and Venus are at the inner and the outer edge of the Sun's HZ (respectively), neither is capable of supporting life on its surface. And with more potentially-habitable planets being discovered all the time, a new study suggests that it might be time to refine our definition of habitable zones.
Welcome to the Inhospitable Zone.
(Score: 2, Troll) by VLM on Tuesday July 31 2018, @07:21PM
Well, remember, it works both ways, and now that we have upgraded from 2 genders to 1488 genders, there's plenty of other weird redefinition going on in the NewSpeak world. For example, as an Apache-Attack-Helicopter-Kin my habitable zone is limited such that I can only reproduce in a world wide empire having a substantial military industrial complex. For my partner and I to enjoy inserting titanium forged turbine blades up each other's exhaust ports in the privacy of our own bedroom, as we do, don't judge, check your privilege ( this post's privilege level has been checked to be chmod 444 ) , takes a rather substantial heavy industry presence.
Somewhat more seriously, it would be interesting to study or analyze exactly what cause and effect relationship exists, if any.
... any locale with more than 5% urban hipsters? That's what I was thinking.