Ignored Exoplanet May Be a Watery World
By Mark Brown for Wired
May 18, 2011
Gliese 581, a red dwarf star some 20 light years away in the
constellation of Libra, continues to excite planet hunters despite a checkered
and controversial history.
Gliese 581g, a habitable Earth-like exoplanet orbiting the
red dwarf, thrilled astronomers when it was discovered in September 2010 as it
was the most feasibly habitable exoplanet yet observed. But a few months later its
entire existence was brought into question — no one has seen any significant
signal from 581g since. It could have just been noise in the stellar wobbles of
the faraway red dwarf. The mysterious 581g sat in the so-called Goldilocks
zone, where it orbited at just the right distance from its roasting parent star
that water, if it existed on the planet, would neither boil nor freeze. But now
a group of French researchers, led by British scientist Robin Wordsworth, have
taken another look at the data for 581d — another of the red dwarf’s planets —
performing a comprehensive 3-D climate simulation on the planet. The simulation
uses fundamental physical principles to look at a wide range of conditions, and
account for any atmospheric cocktail of gases, clouds and aerosols.
To the team’s surprise, it believes that 581d would have a
dense carbon dioxide atmosphere, which would give the planet a stable and warm
climate. In a press release, France ’s
National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) concluded that 581d is likely
warm enough to hold liquid water, in “oceans, clouds and rainfall”. Anyone who stood on the planet would probably see clear blue
skies, like on Earth, also. Most planets’ thick atmospheres bounce the majority
of sunlight back into space. On Earth, and potentially 581d, the Rayleigh scattering
phenomenon lets more sunlight in, leading to blue skies and a warmer climate. But
if humans ever did walk on 581d they’d still find a pretty bizarre planet with
very un-Earthlike conditions. The dense air and thick clouds would drape the
surface in a perpetually murky red twilight, and its hulking mass (at least 5.6
times that of Earth) means surface gravity would be double that of Earth’s. “The
most important implication of these results,” a spokesperson for the Scientific
Research center said in a press release, “may be the idea that life-supporting
planets do not in fact need to be particularly like the Earth at all.”
[Of course for me the most exciting thing about this
discovery is that 581g is only 20 Light Years away. I’m guessing that, given enough
incentive, we could probably have probes capable of travelling that distance –
maybe in 40 to 60 years – within a century or so. We could have a probe
orbiting the planet – with a number of ground-based smart probes reporting back
more detailed information – within 150 years (and the way technology advances
I’m probably being very conservative here). It’s exciting stuff!]
2 comments:
I wonder at how life would evove differenty on that planet.
Well, the process would be the same - Evolution by Natural Selection. The outcome, however, would be very speculative. I understand that the common consensus is that liquid water would be needed to provide an environment to start it all off. But as local conditions would probably be very different to Earth the route that life followed as it evolved could go to very different places. When we finally find life out there they'll probably have to create a whole new taxonomy to fit it in with the examples on Earth they've already cataloged.
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