The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Exoplanet larger than Earth ‘may be habitable’

Astronomer­s determine K2-18b ‘could have the right conditions for life’

- NINA MASSEY

An exoplanet more than double the size of Earth could potentiall­y be habitable, astronomer­s have found.

This opens the search for life up to planets significan­tly larger than Earth, but smaller than Neptune.

A team from Cambridge University used the mass, radius, and atmospheri­c data of the exoplanet K2-18b and determined it is possible for the planet to host liquid water at habitable conditions beneath its hydrogen-rich atmosphere.

K2-18b is 124 light-years away, 2.6 times the radius and 8.6 times the mass of Earth, and orbits its star within the habitable zone, where temperatur­es could allow liquid water to exist.

Last year two different teams reported detection of water vapour in its hydrogen-rich atmosphere.

But the extent of the atmosphere and the conditions of the interior underneath remained unknown.

Dr Nikku Madhusudha­n from Cambridge’s Institute of Astronomy, who led the study, said: “Water vapour has been detected in the atmosphere­s of a number of exoplanets but, even if the planet is in the habitable zone, that doesn’t necessaril­y mean there are habitable conditions on the surface.

“To establish the prospects for habitabili­ty, it is important to obtain a unified understand­ing of the interior and atmospheri­c conditions on the planet – in particular, whether liquid water can exist beneath the atmosphere.”

Because of the size of K2-18b, some suggest it would be more like a smaller version of Neptune than a larger version of Earth.

It is thought a mini-Neptune would have a significan­t hydrogen envelope surroundin­g a layer of high-pressure water, with an inner core of rock and iron.

If this envelope is too thick, it would be too hot, and pressure at the surface of the water layer beneath would be far too great to support life.

According to the new study which is published in the Astrophysi­cal Journal Letters, despite the size of K2-18b, its hydrogen envelope is not necessaril­y too thick and the water layer could support life.

Astronomer­s used the existing observatio­ns of the atmosphere, to confirm the atmosphere is hydrogenri­ch with a significan­t amount of water vapour.

They also found that levels of other chemicals such as methane and ammonia were lower than expected.

But whether these levels can be attributed to biological processes remains to be seen.

The researcher­s found that the maximum extent of the hydrogen envelope allowed by the data is around 6% of the planet’s mass, though most of the solutions require much less.

The minimum amount of hydrogen is about one-millionth by mass, similar to the mass fraction of the Earth’s atmosphere.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? The finding opens the search for life up to planets larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune.
Picture: PA. The finding opens the search for life up to planets larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune.

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