Posted on Dec 14, 2021 in Astronomy, Climate Change, Extraterrestrial Life
Astronomers have said that Mars tugs at the human imagination like no other planet. In science fiction movies and television shows, real-life locations on Earth, such as California’s Redwood National Forest and the Sahara Desert, have long been used to represent alien worlds. But recently, in a Star Trek-style twist, reports the University of Colorado, Boulder, a group of scientists, including researchers at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) have been using a planet in our own backyard—Mars, a planet solely inhabited by robots–-to help characterize and identify habitable, Earth-like planets in other solar systems.
Exoplanets’ Atmospheres
An international multi-disciplinary team of modelers, observational scientists and theoreticians from three science disciplines—space physics, planetary sciences and astrophysics—has been working synergistically to extrapolate their current understanding of Mars to determine which planets beyond Earth’s solar system are most likely to host life. The answer hinges on the exoplanets’ atmospheres—and what it takes for each planet to retain those atmospheres, including Mars if it were circling a different star.
One example the team is studying is the case of “Exoplanet Mars” orbiting a dim, class-M star, which is only about 4% as bright as our sun and nearly 3,000 degrees Celsius cooler. This research will provide a better understanding of how long a planet like Mars could retain an atmosphere if it orbited this smaller, cooler, but more active star.
The real-life Mars is believed to have lost its atmosphere to solar wind. On Earth, the magnetic field deflects the charged particles in the solar wind and therefore acts as a shield that protects Earth’s atmosphere, and in turn life itself. But Mars lacks that shield, leading to its primordial atmosphere slowly eroding. The current study tries to hypothesize what would happen to a planet similar to Mars when it orbits around a different kind of star.
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An Alien Analogue
David Brain, a planetary researcher at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and the team’s leader, wrote in an email to The Daily Galaxy: “There are several physical processes that can remove atmospheric particles to space. Different processes have been important for different atmospheric species such as hydrogen or oxygen at different times during the history of Mars. Only by considering all of the processes together can we get an accurate idea of how planets like Mars lose their atmosphere, whether they orbit our Sun or other stars in the galaxy.”
A Remarkable Natural Experiment
The preliminary results indicate the rate at which Exoplanet Mars would lose its atmosphere would be larger than what the real-world planet has experienced.
“Mars is a remarkable natural experiment that demonstrates how its atmosphere and, therefore, its habitability can be affected by the properties of both the planet and the star it orbits,” said Brain.r. The challenge, he added, is assembling the expertise, the observations and the model results to understand the relative importance of each property, with the goal of making predictions about the habitability of individual planets orbiting other stars.
This multi-disciplinary, cutting-edge approach is made possible by the new Magnetic fields, Atmosphere, and the Connection to Habitability (MACH) NASA DRIVE Science Center, which Brain leads. DRIVE Science Centers (DSC) are part of NASA’s integrated multi-agency initiative to address grand challenge goals.
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Pathways to Habitable Worlds
“Our center has brought together experts from many scientific disciplines to collaboratively address big-picture questions like the habitability of alien planets,” said Brain.
Organizing scientists from many different disciplines is not always easy. Brain said the team members have had to learn how to communicate more effectively and figure out how to meld models developed by scientists in disciplines that had diverged from each other in recent decades.
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“Together we are figuring out which physics are important to include and how to link models together, while making sure team members feel heard and are inclusive in the process,” explained Brain.
The importance of this work was highlighted just a few weeks ago, when the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine named “Pathways to Habitable Worlds” as one of the three key focus areas for future research in its Pathways to Discovery in Astronomy and Astrophysics for the 2020s (Astro 2020) report.
“The fact that the astronomy and astrophysics community has highlighted this topic for the next decade is very exciting and speaks to the significance of our work,” said Brain.
Image credit: NASA Mars
Avi Shporer, Research Scientist, with the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research via University of Colorado, Boulder
Avi Shporer, Research Scientist, MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research. A Google Scholar, Avi was formerly a NASA Sagan Fellow at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). His motto, not surprisingly, is a quote from Carl Sagan: “Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.”