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Ever wondered how much is the earth worth? Turns out someone actually did the math on this. A Yale astronomer named Greg Laughlin took a crack at it back in 2020 and came up with something wild - roughly $5 quadrillion. That's $5,000,000,000,000,000 if you're counting zeros.
He didn't just pick a random number though. The calculation factored in things like the planet's mass, temperature, age, and most importantly, its ability to support life. The better a planet is at keeping things alive, the higher its theoretical value.
Now here's where it gets interesting. When you compare Earth to other planets in our solar system, the gap is insane. Mars? Only worth about $16,000. Venus? Get this - one cent. A literal penny. And honestly, when you think about Venus with its surface hot enough to melt lead, an atmosphere that's 96% carbon dioxide, and winds that would tear you apart, it's hard to argue with that valuation.
Just for fun, someone even estimated what's the earth worth compared to fictional stuff. The Death Star from Star Wars? Supposedly valued at $852 quadrillion. Yeah, a movie prop is worth way more than the actual planet we live on in this thought experiment.
Obviously this isn't meant for actual real estate transactions or anything. But it does drive home a pretty humbling point - a planet that can actually support life isn't just rare. It's astronomically valuable. And we've only got one.