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You can download these NASA horror movie posters about real, scary exoplanets

One is a "slasher planet." The others circle an "undead" star. You wouldn't be able to survive on either.
Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto

NASA has released two horror movie-style posters for Halloween, celebrating two real exoplanets where the conditions would be frightful for any human. The agency has also made them downloadable so you can post them in your home, office, garage, or dorm.

One celebrates HD 189733 b -- bright blue world that looks pretty from space, but hides a deadly secret.

"The nightmare world of HD 189733 b Presents 'Rains of Terror,'" the poster reads. "It's death by a million cuts on this slasher planet!"

Why a slasher planet? Its atmosphere is made up of mostly sand and glass. The winds are a gentle 5,400 mph.

"At those speeds, the silicates whipping through the air might create a perpetual storm of flying glass," NASA said.

If you're dying to go there, be ready for a 63-year-long trip at the speed of light. But, don't expect to survive on that planet.

You can download this poster from NASA here

Credit: NASA
Among the horrifyingly inhospitable worlds is HD 189733 b, a planet with an atmosphere full of silicates — the key component in sand and glass — and winds blowing at over 5,400 mph.

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The second poster highlights three planets orbiting pulsar PSR B1257+12. A pulsar is the remains of a collapsed star, yet it still sends out dual beams of radiation. So the star is dead, but still active -- an undead star. 

That radiation plus high-energy particles regularly assault the three planets --  Poltergeist, Draugr and Phobetor. Life, as we know it on Earth, could not form there.

"Planets caught in the horrifying grip of an undead star, PSR B1257+12 presents 'Zombie Worlds,'" the poster reads.

Download this poster from NASA here

Credit: NASA
Planets Poltergeist, Draugr and Phobetor — orbit the pulsar PSR B1257+12. Sometimes called a "dead star," a pulsar is the remains of a star that has collapsed. But it still produces dual beams of intense radiation that make life on those worlds impossible.

NASA also had fun creating a horror movie trailer to accompany their posters.

"People are often most interested in finding exoplanets that could resemble Earth or potentially support life as we know it," said Thalia Rivera, an outreach specialist at JPL. "But there are so many other amazing, mystifying planets out there that are completely unlike Earth and that show us the huge variety of ways planets can form and evolve. My favorite thing about exoplanets is how extreme they can get!"

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