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h2ouniverse
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<p>This article on New Scientist considering Jupiter as tha cause of the Late Heavy Bombardment</p><p>http://space.newscientist.com/article/mg20026784.800-jupiter-produced-greatest-pounding-in-earths-history.html?DCMP=ILC-hmts&nsref=space2_head_Jupiter%20produced%20greatest%20pounding%20in%20Earth's%20history</p><p>And this paper from Horner at EPSC:</p><p>http://www.cosis.net/abstracts/EPSC2008/00160/EPSC2008-A-00160-1.pdf</p><p>Excerpt: "<font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT"><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT"><font size="1">Therefore, for the asteroids and short-period comets, it </font><font size="1">seems that our Jupiter does offer some shielding, when </font><font size="1">compared to the case where the planet has a mass of </font><font size="1">around 0.2 </font></font></font><em><font face="TimesNewRomanPS-ItalicMT"><font face="TimesNewRomanPS-ItalicMT"><font size="1">M</font></font></font></em><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT"><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT" size="1">J</font></font><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT" size="2"><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT" size="2"><font size="1">, but, compared to the scenario where no </font><font size="1">Jupiter is present at all (or the Jupiter in question has </font><font size="1">very low mass), Jupiter actually acts to increase the </font><font size="1">Earth-bound flux."</font></font></font> </p><p>Once again, the illusions of the anti-Copernicians take a blow. It has been fashionable these days to believe that having a Jupiter was a necessary condition for survival of complex life in a planetary system. And that we are exceptionnally lucky, that we had enjoyed a set of conditions that were all beneficial and so on... Having one parameter that is not as beneficial as it could have been is a welcome relativization.</p><p> </p>