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How the Webb Space Telescope Will Support the Search for Alien Life. Webb will be a "game changer" in our understanding of distant worlds, scientists say.
https://gizmodo.com ^ | Mar 23, 2022 | By Nick Young

Posted on 03/23/2022 10:58:22 AM PDT by Red Badger

Astronomers have long questioned whether Earth-like planets exist elsewhere in the universe and if they harbor life. So far, answers have only come from science fiction universes rather than our own. NASA’s latest observatory, the Webb Space Telescope, will take us one step closer to the answer, offering an unprecedented look into rocky worlds orbiting other stars and what they are like.

“Imagine if we can establish that there are some rocky worlds with water vapor and with water oceans,” said Sara Seager, a professor of physics and planetary science at MIT. “That’s such a giant step forward from where we are today. It’s like, not even quantifiable.”

While Webb will study everything from galaxies to stars, astronomers can’t wait to use it to study planets outside of our solar system. Webb will tease out the details of these exoplanets’ atmospheres, identifying what elements and gases are present. Compared to earlier telescopes, such as the Hubble Space Telescope, scientists expect Webb to offer vast improvements.

“It’s a game-changer,” said Nestor Espinoza, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which operates Webb and Hubble.

Hubble can detect ingredients in the atmospheres of larger gas planets, similar in size to Neptune or Jupiter. Webb, on the other hand, could provide the first analysis of the atmospheres of exoplanets similar to Earth.

“The single fact of being able to detect atmospheres around Earth-sized planets, it’s a huge step into our exploration of what other exoplanets look like,” Espinoza said. “It’s going to be a revolutionary machine.”

Astronomers didn’t discover the first exoplanets until three decades ago, in 1992. They now know of more than 5,000 planets orbiting stars other than the Sun, each one a unique alien world full of untold mysteries. Many of these discovered planets have rocky compositions like the planets of our inner solar system, such as Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. Yet, observing a rocky planet’s atmosphere has remained elusive to scientists, denying them the opportunity to determine key information about the surface of those planets, including if key ingredients for life such as water are present.

To deduce an exoplanet’s atmospheric composition, Webb will use a technique called transmissions spectroscopy. If an exoplanet passes between Webb and the star during its orbit, it will partially block some of the starlight. If the exoplanet has an atmosphere, whatever gases it contains will absorb some of that light before it reaches Webb’s sensitive mirrors. Astronomers can then determine what wavelengths are missing from the light that passed through the atmosphere to infer the gases present.

While astronomers have used this technique dozens of times before with previous telescopes, Webb provides infrared observations, allowing it to discern more gases than Hubble, which mainly detects visible light.

“I think the most exciting thing about Webb is the broad wavelength coverage that it’s going to give,” Thomas Mikal-Evans, an astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, said. “In the [infrared] range, there are many absorption features due to not just water but other molecules like methane and carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, ammonia, cyanide. It’s really opening up this region of wavelength space that we’ve been blind to and will allow us to detect many more chemical species than we’ve previously been sensitive to.”

One set of exoplanets that astronomers have been eager to view through Webb is the TRAPPIST-1 system. The TRAPPIST-1 system contains seven rocky planets orbiting a red dwarf star slightly larger than the planet Jupiter and half the temperature of our Sun. Of particular interest are the planets in the habitable zone, where water can stay in liquid form.

“If you asked an astronomer 20 years ago about this, they would have thought that this is science fiction.” Detecting an atmosphere on these exoplanets would allow astronomers to do something they have never been able to do: compare the rocky planets in our solar system to rocky planets in an alien solar system. “That has been a dream so far,” Espinoza said.

However, determining the atmosphere’s composition might be easier said than done.

“You have to kind of be lucky that you’ve got an atmospheric composition that has strong spectral features that really pop up in your data,” Mikal-Evans said. Because astronomers can’t predict what is in the atmosphere ahead of time, they don’t know if there will be clouds or haze like on Venus or Saturn’s moon Titan that would reduce Webb’s ability to determine what the atmosphere is made of.

If Webb detects an atmosphere on one of these planets, the next step would be to understand what it is made of and what that tells us about the surface. For example, if Webb discovered water vapor in the atmosphere of a small rocky exoplanet, that would mean there must be a liquid ocean on the surface to provide a steady supply of new water molecules. That’s because the star’s ultraviolet radiation would break the water vapor molecules apart. With the hydrogen floating out into space (as rocky exoplanets are too small to keep it), and the oxygen reacting with a different element and forming a different chemical compound, only a large reservoir of water could replenish the water vapor in the atmosphere.

Of course, if Webb detects water vapor or a gas that’s a potential sign of life—particularly carbon dioxide, methane, or ammonia—an inevitable question will be if we’ve discovered aliens.

This test image, released March 16, 2022, showed that Webb’s optics are working correctly. Mission controllers continue to remotely align the telescope’s instruments in preparation for the start of scientific observations this summer. This test image, released March 16, 2022, showed that Webb’s optics are working correctly. Mission controllers continue to remotely align the telescope’s instruments in preparation for the start of scientific observations this summer. Image: NASA/STScI All the astronomers interviewed for this story cautioned that, while it is possible that life could be present under those conditions, Webb couldn’t supply convincing evidence of it.

“While I cannot say no, I think [detecting life is] very unlikely for many reasons,” Espinoza said. “Even in the case in which that signal was in the data, like creating the consensus that that’s life, it’s gonna be hugely complicated.”

Getting such a consensus would require evidence that the signal is real and not just random variations in the data. In addition, scientists must rule out any alternative explanation for how the gas could be there without invoking life.

“My opinion is that we won’t sort through all that ever for the limited information we have on exoplanets,” Seager said.

Seager has first-hand experience with this hypothetical scenario. In 2020, she and other scientists reported that they had discovered phosphine in the atmosphere of Venus. Phosphine has few non-life origins, and so finding large abundances of it in an atmosphere could signal life. In response to their research, multiple scientific papers challenged whether phosphine was really in the data or proposed non-biological processes for how it could be there. Other scientists found flaws in those arguments, and the debate is still ongoing.

“I just can’t imagine this level of complex argument on a planet we know nothing about,” Seager said. “We might find some signs, but it’s nothing that people are ever going to be able to prove in any way.”

As for obtaining more evidence, that would fall to the proposed telescopes that come after Webb. “The 2040s is probably a more realistic timeframe for looking for biosignatures seriously,” Mikal-Evans said.

Even though Webb won’t be able to answer whether we are alone in the universe, Seager emphasized that, by studying worlds around other stars, Webb can provide us a new understanding of our place in the universe and how our solar system formed. “It’s going to find some really interesting stuff,” she said.

“If you asked an astronomer 20 years ago about this, they would have thought that this is science fiction,” Espinoza said. “But it is real science.”


TOPICS: Astronomy; Education; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: et; space; telescope; webb
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To: cgbg
Science just can’t deal with the “weird”.

When the Webb crew find galaxies more than 15 BILLION LIGHT YEARS away, first they will guess the instruments are wrong, then the "scientists" will try to hide the data, then the "scientists" will lie about what the measurements mean and eventually someone will say guess what? Basing ALMOST ALL of your conclusions on ONE parameter is not a good idea.

I won't be surprised if we see "the smartest people ever" having meltdowns that will make them look like the dumbest people ever.

21 posted on 03/23/2022 2:00:40 PM PDT by politicianslie (Those who got vaxxed need to update their wills. You are a guinea pig in a dangerous drug trial.)
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To: Red Badger

If they get G-ds astrological coordinates, please forward to my cell phone.

Thanks in advance.

5.56mm


22 posted on 03/23/2022 2:04:21 PM PDT by M Kehoe (Quid Pro Joe and the Ho need to go.)
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To: GingisK

The mafia killed Einstein...because he knew too much.


23 posted on 03/23/2022 2:09:53 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: fishtank

Okay,
I looked up
“Fermis Paradox”,,,???
.


24 posted on 03/23/2022 4:13:38 PM PDT by Big Red Badger (On the Other hand,,, Free Men Choose- - SLAVES OBEY)
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To: cgbg

Yup,
I’m a Radio Guy.
The Art of Radio-—


25 posted on 03/23/2022 4:16:10 PM PDT by Big Red Badger (On the Other hand,,, Free Men Choose- - SLAVES OBEY)
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To: bgill

26 posted on 03/24/2022 5:25:45 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: M Kehoe

God has a toll free number.......................


27 posted on 03/24/2022 5:27:04 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Red Badger

“God has a toll free number.......................”

I know, I use it all the time.

Btw, He answers......

Sometimes the answer is yes, sometimes the answer is no. And sometimes He answers, wtf are you thinking?

5.56mm


28 posted on 03/24/2022 9:50:30 AM PDT by M Kehoe (Quid Pro Joe and the Ho need to go.)
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To: M Kehoe

Be careful what you pray for.

You might just get it...............


29 posted on 03/24/2022 9:54:37 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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