This artist's depiction shows a gas giant planet rising over the horizon of an alien waterworld. New research shows that oceans on super-Earths, once established, can last for billions of years. |
For life as we know it to develop on other planets, those planets would
need liquid water, or oceans. Geologic evidence suggests that Earth's
oceans have existed for nearly the entire history of our world. But
would that be true of other planets, particularly super-Earths? New
research suggests the answer is yes and that oceans on super-Earths,
once established, can last for billions of years.
"When people consider whether a planet is in the habitable zone, they
think about its distance from the star and its temperature. However,
they should also think about oceans, and look at super-Earths to find a
good sailing or surfing destination," says lead author Laura Schaefer of
the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA).
Schaefer presented her findings today in a press conference at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
Even though water covers 70 percent of Earth's surface, it makes up a
very small fraction of the planet's overall bulk. Earth is mostly rock
and iron; only about a tenth of a percent is water.
"Earth's oceans are a very thin film, like fog on a bathroom mirror," explains study co-author Dimitar Sasselov (CfA).
However, Earth's water isn't just on the surface. Studies have shown
that Earth's mantle holds several oceans' worth of water that was
dragged underground by plate tectonics and subduction of the ocean
seafloor. Earth's oceans would disappear due to this process, if it
weren't for water returning to the surface via volcanism (mainly at
mid-ocean ridges). Earth maintains its oceans through this planet-wide
recycling.
Schaefer used computer simulations to see if this recycling process
would take place on super-Earths, which are planets up to five times the
mass, or 1.5 times the size, of Earth. She also examined the question
of how long it would take oceans to form after the planet cooled enough
for its crust to solidify.
She found that planets two to four times the mass of Earth are even
better at establishing and maintaining oceans than our Earth. The oceans
of super-Earths would persist for at least 10 billion years (unless
boiled away by an evolving red giant star).
Interestingly, the largest planet that was studied, five times the
mass of Earth, took a while to get going. Its oceans didn't develop for
about a billion years, due to a thicker crust and lithosphere that
delayed the start of volcanic outgassing.
"This suggests that if you want to look for life, you should look at older super-Earths," Schaefer says.
Sasselov agrees. "It takes time to develop the chemical processes for
life on a global scale, and time for life to change a planet's
atmosphere. So, it takes time for life to become detectable."
This also suggests that, assuming evolution takes place at a similar
rate to Earth's, you want to search for complex life on planets that are
about five and a half billion years old, a billion years older than
Earth.
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