麻豆视频

Illustration of three planets side-by-side
Carl Sagan Institute/R. Payne Artist impression showing the exoplanet LP 890-9c鈥檚 potential evolution from a hot Earth to a desiccated Venus.

Exoplanet may reveal secrets about the edge of habitability

How close can a rocky planet be to a star, and still sustain water and life?

A recently discovered exoplanet may be key to solving that mystery, providing important insights about conditions at the inner edge of a star鈥檚 habitable zone and why Earth and Venus developed so differently, according to new research led by , director of the and associate professor of astronomy in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频 (A&S).

Kaltenegger鈥檚 team found that the 鈥渟uper-Earth鈥 LP 890-9c (also named SPECULOOS-2c), which orbits close to the inner edge of its solar system鈥檚 habitable zone, would look very different depending on whether it still had warm oceans, a steam atmosphere or if it had lost its water, assuming it once had oceans like Earth鈥檚.

鈥淟ooking at this planet will tell us what鈥檚 happening on this inner edge of the habitable zone 鈥 how long a rocky planet can maintain habitability when it starts to get hot,鈥 Kaltenegger said. 鈥淚t will teach us something fundamental about how rocky planets evolve with increasing starlight, and about what will one day happen to us and Earth.鈥

Kaltenegger is the lead author of 鈥,鈥 published June 21 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters. Co-authors are , research associate in the Department of Astronomy (A&S); Zifan Lin 鈥20, doctoral student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; James Kasting, professor emeritus at Pennsylvania State University; and Laetitia Delrez, postdoctoral researcher at the University of Li猫ge in Belgium, who led an international team that in September 2022.

A companion paper led by Jonathan Gomez Barrientos 鈥22, a graduate student at the California Institute of Technology, demonstrates that NASA鈥檚 James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) could distinguish between the exoplanet鈥檚 potential different atmospheres, making it a prime target for the flagship observatory. Kaltenegger is a co-author with Ryan J. MacDonald, a former research associate at Cornell and now a NASA Sagan Fellow at the University of Michigan, of 鈥.鈥

LP 890-9c is one of two super-Earths orbiting a red dwarf star located 100 light years from Earth, the Delrez team 鈥 which included Kaltenegger 鈥 announced last year. (NASA鈥檚 had previously identified LP 890-9b.) They said liquid water or an atmosphere rich in water vapor was possible on LP 890-9c, which is about 40% larger than Earth and circles the small, cool star in 8.5 days.

Those criteria suggested it to be one of the best targets for JWST to study among the known, potentially habitable terrestrial planets, in addition to the .

鈥淧rofessor Kaltenegger and I were thinking this exoplanet might be an excellent target for JWST,鈥 Barrientos said, 鈥渂ut now we鈥檝e proven this hypothesis, and that LP 890-9c may potentially reveal if life is possible on the edge 鈥 the inner edge of the habitable zone.鈥

Her team鈥檚 models are the first to detail differences in the chemical signatures generated by rocky planets near the habitable zone鈥檚 interior boundary, based on variables including the planet鈥檚 size, mass, chemical makeup, surface temperature and pressure, atmospheric height and cloud cover. The calculations were key to estimating how much time JWST would need to confirm the basic composition of an atmosphere 鈥 if there is one.

The models span several scenarios thought to reflect stages of rocky planets鈥 evolution, ranging from a 鈥渉ot Earth鈥 where life might still be possible, to a desolate Venus featuring a carbon dioxide atmosphere. In between are phases Earth is expected to experience as the sun grows brighter and hotter with age, causing the oceans to gradually evaporate and fill the atmosphere with steam before boiling off entirely.

How long those processes might take is unknown, and the astronomers say LP 890-9c provides a rare opportunity to explore that evolution.

鈥淭his planet is the first target where we can test these different scenarios,鈥 Kaltenegger said. 鈥淚f it鈥檚 still a hotter Earth 鈥 hot, but with liquid water and conditions for life 鈥 then the inner edge of the habitable zone could be teeming with life. If we see that it鈥檚 already a full-blown Venus, then water can get lost faster than we anticipate.鈥

In the companion paper, Kaltenegger and colleagues propose that JWST could confirm the presence of an atmosphere 鈥 and whether it is primarily water vapor 鈥 in as few as three transits, or passages of the planet across its host star. If further observation is warranted, they estimate a total of eight transits could detect a Venus-like atmosphere, while 20 transits could find evidence of a potentially habitable 鈥渉ot Earth鈥 scenario.

It鈥檚 possible that LP 890-9c has no atmosphere and hosts no life, or that it resembles a Venus with thick clouds that would block light from reflecting and thus yield little information. Deeper investigation promises to provide valuable clues, Kaltenegger said.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 know what this planet on the edge of habitability could be like, so we have to look,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is what real exploration is about.鈥

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Illustration of three planets side-by-side
Carl Sagan Institute/R. Payne Artist impression showing the exoplanet LP 890-9c鈥檚 potential evolution from a hot Earth to a desiccated Venus.