Just stumbled on something wild about how much Earth is actually worth. Back in 2020, Yale astronomer Greg Laughlin did this whole valuation study and came up with roughly $5 quadrillion. Yeah, five followed by fifteen zeros.



He didn't just pull a number out of nowhere either. The calculation factored in mass, temperature, age, and most importantly - whether the planet can actually support life. Basically, the more habitable a planet is, the higher its theoretical value.

Here's where it gets interesting. Mars? Only worth about $16,000 according to this framework. Venus though... one cent. Literally a penny. Can't blame him when you think about Venus - surface hot enough to melt lead, atmosphere that's 96% CO2, and winds that would tear apart anything we send there.

So what's Earth worth compared to other things? Even the Death Star from Star Wars comes in at $852 quadrillion. Fictional space station beats our actual planet by a crazy margin.

Obviously nobody's buying or selling planets anytime soon. But it's a reminder of something we probably don't think about enough - a life-supporting world isn't just rare. It's astronomically valuable in ways we can barely comprehend. And we're living on the only one we know of.
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