The Asian Age

Water worlds could support life: Study

-

Washington, Sept. 1: The conditions for life surviving on planets entirely covered in water are more fluid than previously thought, opening up the possibilit­y that water worlds could be habitable, according to a study.

Scientists have assumed that planets covered in a deep ocean would not support the cycling of minerals and gases that keeps the climate stable on Earth, and thus would not be friendly to life.

The study, published in The Astrophysi­cal Journal, found that ocean planets could stay in the “sweet spot” for habitabili­ty much longer than previously assumed.

The researcher­s from the University of Chicago and Pennsylvan­ia State University in the US based their findings on more than a thousand simulation­s.

“his really pushes back against the idea you need an Earth clone — that is, a planet with some land and a shallow ocean," said Edwin Kite, an assistant professor at UChicago.

As telescopes get better, scientists are finding more and more planets orbiting stars in other solar systems.

Such discoverie­s are resulting in new research into how life could potentiall­y survive on other planets, some of which are very different from Earth — some may be covered entirely in water hundreds of miles deep.

Since life needs an extended period to evolve, and because the light and heat on planets can change as their stars age, scientists usually look for planets that have both some water and some way to keep their climates stable over time.

Kite, and Eric Ford from Penn State set up a simulation with thousands of randomly generated planets, and tracked the evolution of their climates over billions of years.

“The surprise was that many of them stay stable for more than a billion years, just by luck of the draw,” Kite said.

“Our best guess is that it's on the order of 10 per cent of them,” he said.

These lucky planets sit in the right location around their stars.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India