![]() |
|
Astrophysics |
||
Astronomers create chart to ID life-bearing planets in distant star systemsBy Christine Pulliam
|
From outer space, no other planet in our solar system resembles Earth, the blue planet. Our atmosphere, oceans and green, plant-covered continents reflect the light of the sun in a unique spectrum of colors. Earth also emits invisible infrared radiation. Should astronomers on Earth one day spy a planet in some distant star system with a similar profile, they might say the existence of life on this new world is the best explanation. Building upon this simple concept, astronomers Lisa Kaltenegger, Wesley Traub and Kenneth Jucks of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., have created a new guide by which astronomers can identify planets in other solar systems that may contain life. The guide is based on computer models that calculate how the reflected light and emitted radiation of the Earth appears from trillions of miles away and just how that spectrum has changed during the Earth’s geologic past. Spectral signatures Although current space telescopes are unable to examine the faint light from planets in distant solar systems, future instruments will have that capability. The work of Kaltenegger, Traub and Jucks is in anticipation of that day. Many astronomers believe the search for extraterrestrial life will meet with success in the next 10 to 20 years. To find other life-bearing worlds, astronomers plan to first look in distant solar systems for planets in Earthlike orbits around their stars. These orbits are in what astronomers call "habitable zones"--areas around a star where the temperature allows for the presence of water in a liquid state. To get its start, life on Earth required both land and liquid water. So researchers will be on the lookout for small, rocky planets orbiting in a "habitable zone" around a star. Methane But natural processes like volcanism also can inject methane into the air, Kaltenegger cautions. "Methane itself is not an unambiguous sign of life. But detecting both methane and oxygen at the same time is an excellent biosignature." Oxygen "When aerobic bacteria displaced anaerobic bacteria as the dominant life form, they introduced oxygen to Earth’s atmosphere," says Traub, who also works at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "That oxygen made multicellular life, including human life, possible. Complex, diverse On Earth, life continued to evolve from blue-green algae to more complex organisms, yielding the great diversity of species now present on this planet. Some scientists are skeptical that life forms as complex as those found on Earth exist elsewhere in the galaxy. Nevertheless, discovering life elsewhere in the universe surely would count as one of the greatest and most profound moments in human history. "Looking up at the night sky and knowing that planets like ours, complete with life, exist out there somewhere would forever change our view of the universe," Kaltenegger says. “The sky would be even richer because we could start to investigate what those other worlds are really like and how they have evolved.” |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||