Wednesday, June 10, 2009
As astronomers gaze toward nearby
planetary systems in search of life, they are focusing their attention on each
system's habitable zone, where heat radiated from the star is just right to keep
a planet's water in liquid form.
A number of planets have been
discovered orbiting red dwarf stars, which make up about three-quarters of the
stars close to our solar system. Potentially habitable planets must orbit close
to those stars – perhaps one-fiftieth the distance of Earth to the sun – since
those stars are smaller and generate less heat than our sun.
But new
calculations indicate that, with planets so close, tidal forces exerted on
planets by the parent star's gravity could limit what is regarded as a star's
habitable zone and change the criteria for planets where life could potentially
take root.
Scientists believe liquid water is essential for life. But a
planet also must have plate tectonics to pull excess carbon from its atmosphere
and confine it in rocks to prevent runaway greenhouse warming. Tectonics, or the
movement of the plates that make up a planet's surface, typically is driven by
radioactive decay in the planet's core, but a star's gravity can cause tides in
the planet, which creates more energy to drive plate tectonics.
"If you
have plate tectonics, then you can have long-term climate stability, which we
think is a prerequisite for life," said Rory Barnes, a University of Washington
postdoctoral researcher in astronomy.
However, tectonic forces cannot be
so severe that geologic events quickly repave a planet's surface and destroy
life that might have gotten a foothold, he said. The planet must be at a
distance where tugging from the star's gravitational field generates tectonics
without setting off extreme volcanic activity that resurfaces the planet in too
short a time for life to prosper.
Barnes is lead author of a paper to be
published by The Astrophysical Journal Letters that uses new calculations from
computer modeling to define a "tidal habitable zone." Co-authors are Brian
Jackson and Richard Greenberg from the University of Arizona and Sean Raymond
from the University of Colorado. The research was funded by NASA.
"Overall, the effect of this work is to reduce the number of habitable
environments in the universe, or at least what we have thought of as habitable
environments," Barnes said. "The best places to look for habitability are where
this new definition and the old definition overlap."
The new
calculations have implications for planets previously considered too small for
habitability. An example is Mars, which used to experience tectonics but that
activity ceased as heat from the planet's decaying inner core dissipated.
But as planets get closer to their suns, the gravitational pull gets
stronger, tidal forces increase and more energy is released. If Mars were to
move closer to the sun, the sun's tidal tugs could possibly restart the
tectonics, releasing gases from the core to provide more atmosphere. If Mars
harbors liquid water, at that point it could be habitable for life as we know
it.
Various moons of Jupiter have long been considered as potentially
harboring life. But one of them, Io, has so much volcanic activity, the result
of tidal forces from Jupiter, that it is not regarded as a good candidate.
Tectonic activity remakes Io's surface in less than 1 million years.
"If
that were to happen on Earth, it would be hard to imagine how life would
develop," Barnes said.
A potential Earth-like planet, but eight times
more massive, called Gliese 581d was discovered in 2007 about 20 light years
away in the constellation Libra. At first it was thought the planet was too far
from its sun, Gliese 581, to have liquid water, but recent observations have
determined the orbit is within the habitable zone for liquid water. However, the
planet is outside the habitable zone for its sun's tidal forces, which the
authors believe drastically limits the possibility of life.
"Our model
predicts that tides may contribute only one-quarter of the heating required to
make the planet habitable, so a lot of heat from decay of radioactive isotopes
may be required to make up the difference," Jackson said.
Barnes added,
"The bottom line is that tidal forcing is an important factor that we are going
to have to consider when looking for habitable planets."
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University of Washington