Posted on 07/09/2024 12:50:05 PM PDT by Red Badger
The same observations also indicate LHS 1140b is a world of mostly solids and liquids, not an undersized gas giant.
Artist's impression of LHS 1140b in the likely scenario where one side is all ice, while the side tidally locked to its star has a region of liquid ocean and cloud, which unfortunately looks like an eyeball (Earth for size comparison).
Image Credit: B. Gougeon/Universite de Montreal
Observations by the JWST have revealed exciting hints of an Earth-like atmosphere on a planet orbiting a relatively nearby star. The planet is likely to be cooler than Earth, but still warmer than Mars and possibly well-suited to life.
The planet LHS 1140b has been causing excitement ever since it was discovered in 2017, having been dubbed the “Best place to look for life beyond the Solar System”. However, there are a great many tests a planet needs to pass to have good prospects for hosting life we can detect. LHS 1140b got the title by initially meeting a few of the requirements. Further observations have now confirmed some suspected aspects and provided the first positive signs for others.
LHS 1140b is larger than Earth, with a radius about 70 percent greater than ours. That puts it near the point where it could be a super-Earth, composed of a mix of rock and ice and water, or a sub-Neptune, composed of gas at least until a depth where the pressure would crush you.
However, its density is not that far below Earth’s and observations made by the JWST last December show no sign of the hydrogen-rich atmosphere expected of a gas planet. The most likely explanation for the lower density is that 10-20 percent of its mass is water, with the rest being rock and metal like Earth. The water would probably be a mix of liquid and ice; although the ratio is unknown, that’s a good place to start when looking for life.
LHS 1140b is of such interest not only because of its intrinsic features but because it transits across its star from our perspective, allowing us to get a spectrum of an atmosphere as it blocks the starlight, if just an atmosphere exists. The JWST watched this happen twice last year.
Although seekers of life want a planet that is not all gas, they do want one with some, enough to keep an ocean liquid and give something for lifeforms to breathe. The latest results suggest LHS 1140b hits that sweet spot.
"LHS 1140b is one of the best small exoplanets in the habitable zone capable of supporting a thick atmosphere, and we might just have found evidence of air on this world," said Professor Ryan MacDonald of the University of Montreal in a statement. The spectrum collected most closely matches a predominantly nitrogen-based atmosphere, like Earth’s, but as the uncertainty in MacDonald’s statement indicates, other explanations remain possible. The JWST will need to observe LHS 1140b passing between us and its star on more occasions for confirmation.
"This is the first time we have ever seen a hint of an atmosphere on a habitable zone rocky or ice-rich exoplanet. Detecting atmospheres on small, rocky worlds is a major goal for JWST, but these signals are much harder to see than for giant planet atmospheres," MacDonald said.
Although LHS 1140b is thought to resemble Earth, at least approximately, in composition and temperature, it is very different in one way. It’s almost certainly tidally locked, with one side always facing the red dwarf star LHS 1140, and the other pointing outwards towards endless night. Were its star brighter, this might make one side of the planet too hot to inhabit and the other permanently frozen, leaving a narrow ring where liquid water could survive.
However, unless the atmosphere is also rich in powerful greenhouse gasses, it’s more likely most of LHS 1140b is icy, with a liquid ocean directly facing the star, making it look like a creepy eyeball. The ocean is estimated to be about half the size of the Atlantic, and its center, where the star is directly overhead, might be around 20°C (68°F).
"This is our first tantalizing glimpse of an atmosphere on a super-Earth in the habitable zone. Compared to other known habitable zone exoplanets, such as those in the TRAPPIST-1 system, the star LHS 1140 appears to be calmer and less active, making it significantly less challenging to disentangle LHS 1140 b's atmosphere from stellar signals caused by starspots," Macdonald said. “While we need more JWST observations to confirm the nitrogen-rich atmosphere, and to search for other gases, this is a very promising start."
The other attractive feature of LHS 1140b from our perspective is its location 49 light-years away. TRAPPIST-1f and g, aside, this is the closest transiting planet at a temperature suited to liquid water.
Even if there is no water at LHS 1140b’s surface, recent research suggests it could be well placed to have an internal ocean like Europa, but many times bigger.
By chance, one of the JWST observations also caught LHS 1140c, a smaller but much hotter world, in the act of transiting.
Although LHS 1140b orbits 15 times in an Earth year, many of its transits can’t be observed; for example, because the Sun is in the way. If we want to collect enough data to settle questions about the composition of its atmosphere before the JWST runs out of fuel, observing the planet for longer is required.
The study has been accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, and a preprint is currently available on ArXiv.org.
Attention hollyweird and dems!
Looks nice, but the commute is probably a b!tch ...
Send every lib there. They can have their perfect world there.
You would never make the trip. It is 49 LY away.
It is another sterile wasteland.
Like California................
Wouldn’t “The Best Planet To Look For Life” be Earth?
In 1994, Mexican physicist Miguel Alcubierre published a groundbreaking paper that laid out how a real-life warp drive could work. The solution involves combining a stable matter shell with a shift vector distribution that closely matches well-known warp drive solutions such as the Alcubierre metric.
And I believe that our perfect solar eclipses are just one way that God shows us how “perfect” His creation is - and has to be, in order for us to be here.
The astronaut that took that famous photo of earth while he orbited the moon recently crashed his airplane in the Seattle area (he was 80-something years old).
The photo was an interesting story. He was taking photos of the moon and then the earth came into view. They were all amazed, and really caught off guard. He grabbed a different camera with color film and was able to get the photo.
He said how they had done all of this planning and stuff to take photos of the moon (for future landing sites), and never even thought of the earth - and that ended up being the most important photo of the trip. (Was a huge factor in the environmental movement).
Well if it’s anything like LV426, I’d say send all liberals there.
Smiles
Somehow...I forgot to type in “Venus” as the planet LOL.
I’ll go to get off this shit show of a planet
Does it also have the Low Rider option?
At least it’s not LV-426.
thanks, we figured it out
an added benefit of sending them to Venus is its average temperature of 864 degrees F
So it has an atmosphere. Is there any oxygen in it? You know, we need at least 19% or so to survive.
Our Earth is 21% O. The rest is mostly Nitrogen, with water vapor, less than half a % CO2 and Argon, among other trace elements.
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