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Forget the "Goldilocks zone". New academic paper suggests that planets outside the "habitable zone" might be teeming with life.

 
Pirokovich
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01/08/2014 01:22 PM
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Forget the "Goldilocks zone". New academic paper suggests that planets outside the "habitable zone" might be teeming with life.
(Phys.org) —Earth-sized planets can support life at least ten times further away from stars than previously thought, according to academics at the University of Aberdeen.

A new paper published in Planetary and Space Science claims cold rocky planets previously considered uninhabitable may actually be able to support life beneath the surface.

The team, which included academics from the University of St Andrews, challenge the traditional 'habitable zone' – i.e. the area of space around a star, or sun, which can support life – by taking into consideration life living deep below the ground.

"The traditional habitable zone is also known as the Goldilocks zone," explains PhD student Sean McMahon. "A planet needs to be not too close to its sun but also not too far away for liquid water to persist, rather than boiling or freezing, on the surface.

"But that theory fails to take into account life that can exist beneath a planet's surface. As you get deeper below a planet's surface, the temperature increases, and once you get down to a temperature where liquid water can exist – life can exist there too."

The team created a computer model that estimates the temperature below the surface of a planet of a given size, at a given distance from its star.

"The deepest known life on Earth is 5.3 km below the surface, but there may well be life even 10 km deep in places on Earth that haven't yet been drilled.

"Using our computer model we discovered that the habitable zone for an Earth-like planet orbiting a sun-like star is about three times bigger if we include the top five kilometres below the planet surface.

"The model shows that liquid water, and as such life, could survive 5km below the Earth's surface even if the Earth was three times further away from the sun than it is just now.

"If we go deeper, and consider the top 10 km below the Earth's surface, then the habitable zone for an Earth-like planet is 14 times wider."

The current habitable zone for our solar system extends out as far as Mars, but this re-drawn habitable zone would see the zone extend out further than Jupiter and Saturn. The findings also suggest that many of the so-called "rogue" planets drifting around in complete darkness could actually be habitable.

"Rocky planets a few times larger than the Earth could support liquid water at about 5 km below the surface even in interstellar space (i.e. very far away from a star), even if they have no atmosphere because the larger the planet, the more heat they generate internally.
 Quoting: [link to phys.org]


In other words: Jupiter's Europa, at least two Saturn moons and surely Neptune are the other zoos of this solar system.

5a
Pirokovich (OP)
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01/08/2014 01:29 PM
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Re: Forget the "Goldilocks zone". New academic paper suggests that planets outside the "habitable zone" might be teeming with life.
The current numbers estimate between 11 and 40 billion potentially habitable planets in the Goldilocks zone of Milky Way stars ALONE, but this new study probably triplicates these numbers by adding planets and moons out of the habitable zone.
Anonymous Coward
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01/08/2014 01:31 PM
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Re: Forget the "Goldilocks zone". New academic paper suggests that planets outside the "habitable zone" might be teeming with life.
This isn't even surprising given that all the chemical building blocks for life are out there, everywhere.
Anonymous Coward
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01/08/2014 01:45 PM
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Re: Forget the "Goldilocks zone". New academic paper suggests that planets outside the "habitable zone" might be teeming with life.
"All These Worlds Are Yours Except Europa. Attempt No Landing There. Use Them Together. Use Them in Peace."
 Quoting: Kubrick





GLP