A
rocky alien planet called Gliese 581d may be the first known world beyond Earth
capable of supporting life as we know it, a new study suggests.
Astronomers
performing a new atmospheric-modeling study have found that the planet likely
lies in the "habitable zone" of its host star — that just-right range
of distances that allow liquid water to exist. The alien world could
be Earth-like in key ways, harboring oceans, clouds and rainfall, according to
the research.
This
conclusion is consistent with several other recent modeling studies. But it
does not definitively establish that life-sustaining water flows across the
planet's surface.
The
new study assumes that Gliese 581d, which is about seven times as massive as
Earth, has a thick, carbon-dioxide-based atmosphere. That's very possible on a
planet so large, researchers said, but it's not a given.
The
Gliese 581 system: Worlds of possibilities
Gliese
581d's parent star, known as Gliese 581, is a red dwarf located 20 light-years
from Earth, just a stone's throw in the cosmic scheme of things. So far,
astronomers have detected six planets orbiting the star, and Gliese 581d
is not the only one intriguing to scientists thinking about the possibility of
life beyond Earth.
Another
planet in the system, called Gliese 581g, is about three times as massive
as Earth, and it's also most likely a rocky world. This planet received a lot
of attention when its discovery was announced in September 2010, because it's
located right in the middle of the habitable zone. That makes 581g a prime
candidate for liquid water and life as we know it — if the planet exists.
Some
researchers question the analysis used to discover the planet, and say they
cannot confirm 581g in follow-up studies. The planet's discoverers, however,
are standing by their find.
Gliese
581d orbits outside of 581g, far enough away from its star that researchers
first thought it too cold for life when it was originally discovered in 2007.
But a strong greenhouse effect may warm 581d up substantially, perhaps enough
to support liquid water.
That's
the tentative conclusion of the new study, as well as several other recent studies by different research teams that also
modeled Gliese 581d's possible atmosphere.
Modeling an alien atmosphere
The
planet Gliese 581d receives less than a third of the solar energy that Earth
does from our sun, and it may be tidally locked (a situation in which one side
of the world always faces its sun — a permanent day — and the other faces away,
producing eternal night).
After
Gliese 581d's discovery, it was generally believed that any atmosphere thick
enough to keep the planet warm would become cold enough on the night side to
freeze out entirely, ruining any prospects for a habitable climate, researchers
said.
The
research team tested that possibility in the new study, developing a new kind
of computer model that simulates alien planets' atmospheres and surfaces in
three dimensions. The model is similar to those used to study climate change on
Earth.
When
the team ran the model, they found that Gliese 581d probably can indeed host
liquid water if it has a dense carbon dioxide atmosphere. Even though the
planet is relatively far away from its dim red dwarf parent star, it could be
warmed by a greenhouse effect, with daytime heat circulated around the planet
by the atmosphere.
The
team, led by scientists from the Laboratoire de Métrologie Dynamique
(CNRS/UPMC/ENS/Ecole Polytechnique) at the Institut Pierre Simon Laplace in
Paris, France, published their results in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The
work remains speculative.
To
determine conclusively if Gliese 581d is truly habitable, future work will
probably have to detect and characterize its atmosphere directly. And that is
likely years off, since it requires the development of new and advanced
telescopes. Human-made probes won't be getting to the planet anytime soon; with
current technology, it would take spacecraft hundreds of thousands of years to
make the 20-light-year trek.
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