Posted on 02/05/2018 1:59:12 PM PST by Red Badger
The TRAPPIST-1 system is made up seven roughly Earth-sized planets orbiting a dwarf star around 39 light-years away and is often hailed as the most likely place for life outside our solar system that we know of. A new study offers further insight into each TRAPPIST planet's biological properties and the signs are encouraging.
The new research comes from scientists around the globe, including University of Bern in Germany, the Sorbonne in France, Cambridge, NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston and others. Their paper, "The nature of TRAPPIST-1 Exoplanets," shows that the planets don't have an excess of hydrogen. This means that they are rocky like Earth or Mars, not gaseous like Uranus or Neptune.
In addition to rocky exteriors, planets c and e are likely to have rocky interiors. This would give them another similarity to our solar system's terrestrial planets like Earth and Mars. Planet e, the fourth planet from the TRAPPIST star, is considered the most similar to Earth.
"With TRAPPIST-1e, it is the first time that we can precisely characterize an exoplanet with is most similar to the Earth in terms its radius, mass and the amount of radiation that it receives from its host star," study authors Simon Grimm and Brice-Olivier Demory of Bern wrote in an email to CNN.
"This study allows us to determine the massesand therefore the densities of the planetsmuch better than before. These two properties are the basis which are needed for further studies regarding the habitability of the planets or possible formation scenarios."
The TRAPPIST-1 planets offer many curiosities. In addition to their seemingly Earth-like qualities, the planets also appear to be remarkably close to one another. The system is dynamically stable now, but the planets could not have formed in this tight pack, says Nikole Lewis of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI), co-leader of the Hubble study in a statement to NASA.
Theyre too close together now, so they must have migrated to where we see them. Their primordial atmospheres, largely composed of hydrogen, could have boiled away as they got closer to the star, and then the planets formed secondary atmospheres.
The scientists used NASA's Hubble Telescope for research. As the planets in the TRAPPIST-1 system pass between their star and the powerful optical telescope, the dwarf star blocks out some of each planet's light. The Hubble can observe changes in specific wavelengths of light, these changes offer clues about atmospheric conditions.
The Hubble work here will soon be upended, it is hoped, by the coming James Webb Telescope. The Webb will launch in 2019 and will have a greater focus on planetary atmospheres, looking for heavier gases like carbon dioxide, methane, water, and oxygen. Scientists hope that by eliminating the possibility of massive amounts of hydrogen, they're giving the Webb a leg up.
Hubble is doing the preliminary reconnaissance work so that astronomers using Webb know where to start, Lewis says. Eliminating one possible scenario for the makeup of these atmospheres allows the Webb telescope astronomers to plan their observation programs to look for other possible scenarios for the composition of these atmospheres.
That the planets are rocky, that they all exist in the same place, that some appear to have Earth-like qualities, strikes several of the scientists as bordering on science fiction.
No one ever would have expected to find a system like this, says STScI team member Hannah Wakeford in the NASA statement. Theyve all experienced the same stellar history because they orbit the same star. Its a goldmine for the characterization of Earth-sized worlds.
Michaël Gillon, a study author from University of Liège in Belgium, wrote in an email to CNN that the planets are "very close to...pure fantasy...and still, TRAPPIST-1 does exist!"
This means that they are rocky like Earth or Mars, not gaseous like Uranus...........nuff said!
Oh, only 39 LY. Great, let me know when we can travel at about 50LY/Y. I could dig a trip of 9 months or so to get there!
And the seven planets are named Hops, Malt, Yeast, and Get! In! My! Belly!
Saying “earth-sized” and their childish use of “earth-like”, based on so few particular is insulting to any “scientific” claim these spheres are “like Earth”.
It is no better than saying they are “earth like” merely because they are planets orbiting a star. It takes dozens of other attributes, besides being “rocky” to ACTUALLY be like Earth.
When actual carbon-based water-oxgyen based life is found on some planet somewhere, then it can be said to be “earth like” in the most essential sense. Until then “pseudo” science is grasping at straws and selling ads on web pages; not much else.
It was actually childish of you to rant about the appropriate term “Earth like”. Earth is not just about your definition of life. That’s childishly retarded.
If it is not about life, then what is “earth like” about in any meaningful sense to humans, and any science making “earth-like” claims. “Science” has become dominated by childish populism, throwing out terms to give certain impressions of their meaning that they do not in fact mean.
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