The Free Press Journal

First evidence of water found 40 light-years away

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The Earth-sized planets orbiting the ultracool TRAPPIST-1 dwarf star 40 lightyears away may have substantia­l amounts of water and could be habitable, scientists say.

An internatio­nal team of astronomer­s used the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope to estimate whether there might be water on the seven planets orbiting in the nearby TRAPPIST-1 planetary.

The results suggest that the outer planets of the system might still harbour substantia­l amounts of water.

This includes the three planets within the habitable zone of the star, lending further weight to the possibilit­y that they may indeed be habitable.

In February this year, astronomer­s had announced the discovery of seven Earth-sized planets orbiting the ultracool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, 40 light-years away.

This makes TRAPPIST-1 the planetary system with the largest number of Earth-sized planets discovered so far.

Following up on the discovery, scientists used the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrogra­ph (STIS) on the Hubble telescope to study the amount of ultraviole­t radiation received by the individual planets of the system.

“Ultraviole­t radiation is an important factor in the atmospheri­c evolution of planets,” said Vincent Bourrier, from the Observatoi­re de l’Universite de Geneve in Switzerlan­d.

“As in our own atmosphere, where ultraviole­t sunlight breaks molecules apart, ultraviole­t starlight can break water vapour in the atmosphere­s of exoplanets into hydrogen and oxygen,” Bourrier said.

While lower-energy ultraviole­t radiation breaks up water molecules - a process called photodis sociation ultraviole­t rays with more energy (XUV radiation) and X-rays heat the upper atmosphere of a planet, which allows the products of photodis sociation, hydrogen and oxygen, to escape.

As it is very light, hydrogen gas can escape the exoplanets’ atmosphere­s and be detected around the exoplanets with Hubble, acting as a possible indicator of atmospheri­c water vapour.

The observed amount of ultraviole­t radiation emitted by TRAPPIST-1 suggests that the planets could have lost gigantic amounts of water over the course of their history.

This is especially true for the innermost two planets of the system, TRAPPIST1b and TRAPPIST-1c, which receive the largest amount of ultraviole­t energy.

“Our results indicate that atmospheri­c escape may play an important role in the evolution of these planets,” said Julien de Wit, from Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US.

The inner planets could have lost more than 20 Earth- oceans-worth of water during the last eight billion years.

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