Study finds that a carbon-light atmosphere may indicate the presence of water and life on other terrestrial planets

Study finds that a carbon-light atmosphere may indicate the presence of water and life on other terrestrial planets

Scientists at MIT,‌ the University of Birmingham, and elsewhere say that‍ astronomers’ ⁢best chance of finding ‍liquid water,⁣ and even life ‌on other planets, is to look for ⁢the absence, rather​ than the ⁤presence, of a chemical feature ⁣in their ⁢atmospheres.

What’s more, this new signature is within the sights of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). While scientists have proposed other signs of habitability, those features are challenging if not impossible to measure ⁢with current technologies. The team says this new signature, of relatively depleted ‌carbon dioxide, is the only sign of habitability that is detectable now.

“The Holy Grail in‍ exoplanet science ‌is to look for habitable‍ worlds, and the presence of life, but all the features ⁤that have been ‌talked⁤ about so far ⁣have been beyond the reach ‍of the newest observatories,”⁢ says Julien de Wit, assistant professor⁢ of planetary sciences ⁤at MIT. “Now we​ have a⁢ way to find out if there’s liquid water⁣ on ‍another planet. And it’s​ something we can get to in the next few years.”

The team’s findings​ will appear in Nature Astronomy. De Wit co-led⁤ the study with‌ Amaury Triaud of‌ the University of Birmingham in the UK. Their MIT co-authors include Benjamin Rackham, Prajwal Niraula, Ana Glidden Oliver Jagoutz, Matej Peč, Janusz Petkowski, and Sara ⁤Seager, along with Frieder‍ Klein at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), Martin Turbet of Ècole ⁤Polytechnique in France, and Franck Selsis of ⁢the Laboratoire d’astrophysique de Bordeaux.

Astronomers have so far ‍detected ⁢more than 5,200 ⁢worlds beyond‌ our ​solar system. With ​current ‍telescopes, ⁤astronomers can directly measure a planet’s distance to its star and the time it takes it to complete an ‌orbit. Those measurements can help​ scientists infer ​whether a planet is within a habitable zone. But there’s⁢ been no‌ way to directly confirm whether a ⁤planet is⁢ indeed habitable, meaning that liquid water exists on ‍its surface.

2023-12-30 01:00:03
Original from phys.org rnrn

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