Study Suggests Alien Life Could Exist on Planets Once Deemed Uninhabitable
The study shows heat transfer and subglacial lakes could allow liquid water on tidally locked and icy planets, expanding habitable zones around M- and K-dwarf stars.
- Prof. Amri Wandel's new study in The Astrophysical Journal argues life may exist on tidally locked planets once deemed uninhabitable, challenging classical assumptions.
- For decades astronomers searched a narrow habitable zone roughly from Earth's orbit to Mars's orbit, excluding planets around very different stars or those much closer or farther from their star.
- Using a temperature-tracking model, the study argues heat flows from day to night side, allowing liquid water and subglacial lakes on cold planets, linking JWST atmospheric detections to refined climate models.
- As a result, planets once judged too hot, cold, or dark may now be promising candidates, and hidden liquid reservoirs could widen the worlds worth investigating for search teams.
- The study reframes the search for habitable worlds by expanding environments beyond the classical habitable zone and challenging astronomers and observational programs to reconsider targets, while it may also illuminate extreme climate dynamics on Earth.
9 Articles
9 Articles
Rethinking where life could exist beyond earth
Astronomers have long searched for life within a rather narrow ring around a star, the “habitable zone,” where a planet should be neither too hot nor too cold for liquid water. A new study argues that this ring is too strict: on tidally locked worlds that keep one face in daylight and the other in permanent night, heat may still circulate enough for liquid water to persist on the dark side, even when the planet orbits closer to cool …
Rethinking Where Life Could Exist Beyond Earth - Astrobiology
Astronomers have long searched for life within a rather narrow ring around a star, the “habitable zone,” where a planet should be neither too hot nor too cold for liquid water. A new study argues that this ring is too strict: on tidally locked worlds that keep one face in daylight and the other in […] The post Rethinking Where Life Could Exist Beyond Earth appeared first on Astrobiology.
Extraterrestrial life may exist on many more worlds than previously thought
For many years, astronomers have been looking for extraterrestrial life. In doing so, astronomers have narrowed their search to a small “habitable zone” around stars. This habitable zone defines the region in which the temperature of a planet is likely to be warm enough, but not too warm, for liquid water to exist at the surface of the planet. By analyzing the data in a recent paper published in Astrophysical Journal, Professor Amri Wandel from …
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