Southwest Research Institute (SWRI) Led Team Finds Younger Exoplanets Better Candidates when Looking for Other Earths
From: Southwest Research Institute
May 3, 2022 — As the
scientific community searches for worlds orbiting nearby stars that could
potentially harbor life, new Southwest Research Institute-led research suggests
that younger rocky exoplanets are more likely to support temperate, Earth-like climates.
In the past, scientists
have focused on planets situated within a star’s habitable zone, where it is
neither too hot nor too cold for liquid surface water to exist. However, even
within this so-called “Goldilocks zone,” planets can still develop climates
inhospitable to life. Sustaining temperate climates also requires a planet have
sufficient heat to power a planetary-scale carbon cycle. A key source of this
energy is the decay of the radioactive isotopes of uranium, thorium and
potassium. This critical heat source can power a rocky exoplanet’s mantle
convection, a slow creeping motion of the region between a planet’s core and
crust that eventually melts at the surface. Surface volcanic degassing is a
primary source of CO2 to the atmosphere, which helps keep a
planet warm. Without mantle degassing, planets are unlikely to support
temperate, habitable climates like the Earth’s.
“We know these
radioactive elements are necessary to regulate climate, but we don’t know how
long these elements can do this, because they decay over time,” said Dr. Cayman
Unterborn, lead author of an Astrophysical Journal Letters paper about the
research. “Also, radioactive elements aren’t distributed evenly throughout the
Galaxy, and as planets age, they can run out of heat and degassing will cease.
Because planets can have more or less of these elements than the Earth, we
wanted to understand how this variation might affect just how long rocky
exoplanets can support temperate, Earth-like climates.”
Studying exoplanets is
challenging. Today’s technology cannot measure the composition of an
exoplanet’s surface, much less that of its interior. Scientists can, however,
measure the abundance of elements in a star spectroscopically by studying how
light interacts with the elements in a star’s upper layers. Using these data,
scientists can infer what a star’s orbiting planets are made of using stellar
composition as a rough proxy for its planets.
“Using host stars to
estimate the amount of these elements that would go into planets throughout the
history of the Milky Way, we calculated how long we can expect planets to have
enough volcanism to support a temperate climate before running out of power,”
Unterborn said. “Under the most pessimistic conditions we estimate that this
critical age is only around 2 billion years old for an Earth-mass planet and
reaching 5–6 billion years for higher-mass planets under more optimistic
conditions. For the few planets we do have ages for, we found only a few were
young enough for us to confidently say they can have surface degassing of
carbon today, when we’d observe it with, say, the James Webb Space Telescope.”
This research combined
direct and indirect observational data with dynamical models to understand
which parameters most affect an exoplanet’s ability to support a temperate
climate. More laboratory experiments and computational modeling will quantify
the reasonable range of these parameters, particularly in the era of the James
Webb Space Telescope, which will provide more in-depth characterization of
individual targets. With the Webb telescope, it will be possible to measure the
three-dimensional variation of exoplanet atmospheres. These measurements will
deepen the knowledge of atmospheric processes and their interactions with the
planet’s surface and interior, which will allow scientists to better estimate
whether a rocky exoplanet in habitable zones is too old to be Earth-like.
“Exoplanets without
active degassing are more likely to be cold, snowball planets,” Unterborn said.
“While we can’t say the other planets aren’t degassing today, we can say that
they would require special conditions to do so, such as having tidal heating or
undergoing plate tectonics. This includes the high-profile rocky exoplanets
discovered in the TRAPPIST-1 star system. Regardless, younger planets with
temperate climates may be the simplest places to look for other Earths.”
The Astrophysical
Journal Letters paper describing this research is titled “Mantle Degassing
Lifetimes through Galactic Time and the Maximum Age Stagnant-lid Rocky
Exoplanets can Support Temperate Climates” and can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ac6596(link
is external).
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