NASA may find a planet capable of supporting extraterrestrial life within the decade
Scientists have conducted an experiment showing that NASA's James
Webb Space Telescope (JWST), scheduled to launch in 2018, will be able
to locate planets able to support extraterrestrial life in unprecedented
numbers, possibly taking just a few hours to find water and oxygen in a
planet's atmosphere.
Counter to what many believe, most such planets capable of holding
extraterrestrial life would not orbit a sun-like star, but rather a
white dwarf. White dwarfs are dead stars that eventually cool down and
fade off. They are the most likely candidates for supporting Earth-like
planets because they contain heavy elements. Planets orbiting white
dwarfs are also easier to spot than those that orbit other types of
stars. In order to detect a planet orbiting a white dwarf, scientists
look for a dimming of the dead star's light as the planet passes in
front of it.
"The difficulty lies in the extreme faintness of the signal, which is
hidden in the glare of the 'parent' star," researcher Dan Maoz said in a
press release.
"The novelty of our idea is that, if the parent star is a white dwarf
whose size is comparable to that of an Earth-sized planet, that glare is
greatly reduced, and we can now realistically contemplate seeing the
oxygen biomarker."
In order to help determine the accuracy of the James Webb Telescope
in detecting planets that can support extraterrestrial life, scientists
performed a test using a simulated spectrum. The scientists tried to see
if the telescope would be able to detect the spectrum, which was made
to mimic an inhabited planet like Earth that orbited a white dwarf. The
test results indicated that the telescope would have the ability to
detect the extraterrestrial life-supporting planet.
The study is published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
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