(Press-News.org) Interest in Earth-like planets orbiting within the habitable zone of their host stars has surged, driven by the quest to discover life beyond our solar system. But the habitability of such planets, known as exoplanets, is influenced by more than just their distance from the star.
A new study by Rice University’s David Alexander and Anthony Atkinson extends the definition of a habitable zone for planets to include their star’s magnetic field. This factor, well studied in our solar system, can have significant implications for life on other planets, according to the research published in The Astrophysical Journal on July 9.
The presence and strength of a planet’s magnetic field and its interaction with the host star’s magnetic field are pivotal factors in a planet’s ability to support life. An exoplanet needs a strong magnetic field to protect it from stellar activity, and it must orbit far enough from its star to avoid a direct and potentially catastrophic magnetic connection.
“The fascination with exoplanets stems from our desire to understand our own planet better,” said Alexander, professor of physics and astronomy, director of the Rice Space Institute and member of the Texas Aerospace Research and Space Economy Consortium. “Questions about the Earth’s formation and habitability are the key drivers behind our study of these distant worlds.”
Magnetic interactions
Traditionally, scientists have focused on the “Goldilocks Zone,” the area around a star where conditions are just right for liquid water to exist. By adding the star’s magnetic field to the habitability criteria, Alexander’s team offers a more nuanced understanding of where life might thrive in the universe.
The investigation focused on the magnetic interactions between planets and their host stars, a concept known as space weather. On Earth, space weather is driven by the sun and affects our planet’s magnetic field and atmosphere. For the study, the researchers simplified the complex modeling usually required to understand these interactions.
The researchers characterized stellar activity using a measure of a star’s activity known as the Rossby number (Ro): the ratio of the star’s rotation period to its convective turnover time. This helped them estimate the star’s Alfvén radius — the distance at which the stellar wind effectively becomes decoupled from the star.
Planets within this radius would not be viable candidates for habitability because they would be magnetically connected back to the star, leading to rapid erosion of their atmosphere.
By applying this approach, the team examined 1,546 exoplanets to determine if their orbits lay inside or outside their star’s Alfvén radius.
Life elsewhere in the galaxy
The study found that only two planets, K2-3 d and Kepler-186 f, of the 1,546 examined met all the conditions for potential habitability. These planets are Earth-sized, orbit at a distance conducive to the formation of liquid water, lie outside their star’s Alfvén radius and have strong enough magnetic fields to protect them from stellar activity.
“While these conditions are necessary for a planet to host life, they do not guarantee it,” said Atkinson, a graduate student of physics and astronomy and lead author of the study. “Our work highlights the importance of considering a wide range of factors when searching for habitable planets.”
The study also underscores the need for continued exploration and observation of exoplanetary systems, drawing lessons from the sun-Earth system. By expanding the criteria for habitability, the researchers provide a framework for future studies and observations to work toward determining whether we are alone in the universe.
Alison Farrish, a postdoctoral researcher at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and former Rice graduate student, is also an author of this study, which was supported by the Edinburgh-Rice Strategic Collaboration fund.
END
Rice researchers explore the effects of stellar magnetism on potential habitability of exoplanets
2024-07-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Lehigh University researchers awarded $1 million NSF grant to investigate floating offshore wind turbines
2024-07-22
In the past few years, we’ve seen a push toward renewable energy. One focus is wind, which is harvested via turbines–you may have seen them in mountainous areas, turning in the wind. But the United States’s most abundant wind potential lies offshore; wind speeds are highest off both coasts. This means offshore wind turbines promise high energy yields, akin to the offshore wind production in the North Sea near northern Europe.
But constructing wind turbine platforms in water deeper than ~60 meters presents problems. Turbines in shallow waters, like those in the North Sea, can be mounted on fixed-bottom platforms, held ...
SNIS 2024: New study reveals possible link between gastrointestinal syndromes and risk of brain aneurysm
2024-07-22
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — There is a potential connection between a diagnosis of certain gastrointestinal (GI) syndromes and the formation and rupture of intracranial (brain) aneurysms, according to research presented today at the Society of NeuroInterventional Surgery’s (SNIS) 21st Annual Meeting.
An intracranial aneurysm (IA) occurs when a blood vessel in the brain bulges, putting pressure on the vessel wall. IAs that rupture cause brain bleeding and lead to a hemorrhagic stroke, a life-threatening emergency requiring immediate medical attention ...
More Black Americans die from effects of air pollution
2024-07-22
Everyone knows that air pollution is bad for health, but how bad depends a lot on who you are. People of different races and ethnicities, education levels, locations and socioeconomic situations tend to be exposed to different degrees of air pollution. Even at the same exposure levels, people’s ability to cope with its effects — by accessing timely health care, for example — varies.
A new study by Stanford Medicine researchers and collaborators, which takes into account both exposure to air pollution and susceptibility to its harms, found that Black Americans are significantly more likely to die from causes related to air pollution, compared ...
New study identifies two proteins that may contribute to stroke recurrence
2024-07-22
EMBARGOED UNTIL 2 p.m. Monday, July 22, 2024
Contact:
Jillian McKoy ,jpmckoy@bu.edu
Michael Saunders, msaunder@bu.edu
Jarka Meleszkiewicz, jarka.meleszkiewicz@bristol.ac.uk
##
New Study Identifies Two Proteins That May Contribute to Stroke Recurrence
The study discovered genetic markers in inflammation that may be related to a second stroke or other major cardiovascular event following a stroke. These findings could help identify drug targets to mitigate stroke-related disability and mortality.
People who experience an arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) or transient ischemic stroke (TIA) are at an increased risk of suffering a second stroke or other major adverse cardiovascular ...
Virtual reality training for physicians aims to heal disparities in Black maternal health care
2024-07-22
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — During a checkup with her obstetrician, Marilyn Hayes tells him about overwhelming exhaustion and possible symptoms of postpartum depression, such as feeling unsafe. Hayes, a Black woman, grows increasingly frustrated as her white, male physician, Dr. Richard Flynn, dismisses her symptoms and ignores her wishes when she refuses medication. Hayes becomes visibly uncomfortable when Flynn touches her without permission and makes comments steeped in Black stereotypes, such as assuming that ...
Science, Social Studies classes can help young English-learning students learn to read and write in English
2024-07-22
A new study finds that science and social studies classes may also help young students learn English, even when those classes include difficult and technical vocabulary.
The study, which observed first- and second-grade students in 30 elementary schools in North Carolina, encouraged teachers to keep their English-learning students in class during science and social studies lessons. Science and social studies textbooks in those grades are often relatively technical and difficult for students, so traditional teaching methods in North Carolina encourage teachers to remove English-learning students from those content classes ...
Wijesekera receives funding for FHWA driving simulator support research: Hands-on support for CDA/CARMA - ARCHER Integration Phase I
2024-07-22
Duminda Wijesekera, Professor, Cybersecurity Engineering; Professor, Computer Science, received funding for the project: “FHWA Driving Simulator Support Research: Hands-on support for CDA/CARMA - ARCHER Integration Phase I.”
He will evaluate and test the Nvidia Drive Sim to understand functionality, behaviors, limitations, and interfaces that would be required in full integration.
Nvidia Drive Sim is a simulation platform for autonomous vehicles.
He will also work to discern the ...
Study: Retail viability in Fairfax City mixed use development
2024-07-22
Center for Retail Transformation (CRT) and Center for Real Estate Entrepreneurship (CREE) jointly received funding to study retail viability led by Mehmet Altug, Associate Professor, Information Systems and Operations Management and Director of CRT, Costello College of Business.
Led by Mehmet Altug, the two centers CRT and CREE at Costello College of Business have teamed up to determine market-specific retail opportunities within Fairfax City, specifically within five Small Area Plans. The project will specifically consider ...
Converting captured carbon to fuel: Study assesses what’s practical and what’s not
2024-07-22
The struggle to cut emissions is real.
Last year, the world emitted more than 37 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide, setting a new record high. As a result, sucking CO2 out of the atmosphere has become an increasingly popular idea. Governments worldwide are banking on this technology, called direct air capture, to help them achieve climate goals and avoid the worst consequences of climate change.
But despite more than a dozen direct air capture facilities being up and running around the globe already, the technology ...
University of Houston flexes scientific muscle with breakthrough in skeletal muscle regeneration
2024-07-22
Newly published research from the University of Houston College of Pharmacy identifies key mechanisms of skeletal muscle regeneration and growth of muscles following resistance exercise. It’s a finding that opens the door to the development of targeted therapies for various muscle disorders, like Muscular Dystrophy, which affect millions of people worldwide.
When it comes to muscles and muscle disorders, the importance of a discovery like this cannot be overstated.
The muscle of muscles
The ...