Planets orbiting the scattered stars around the Milky Way may be even more hospitable to life than the Earth, researchers claim.
According to a new study by Ohio State University, any planets orbiting
those stars may very well be hotter and more dynamic than Earth.
The interiors of any terrestrial planets in these systems are likely
warmer than Earth - up to 25 per cent, which would make them more
geologically active and more likely to retain enough liquid water to
support life, at least in its microbial form.
Researchers studied eight “solar twins” of the Sun — stars that very
closely match it in size, age, and overall composition — in order to
measure the amounts of radioactive elements they contain.
Those stars came from a data set recorded by the High Accuracy Radial
Velocity Planet Searcher spectrometer at the European Southern
Observatory in Chile.
They searched the solar twins for elements such as thorium and uranium,
which are essential to Earth’s plate tectonics because they warm our
planet’s interior.
Plate tectonics helps maintain water on the surface of the Earth, so the
existence of plate tectonics is sometimes taken as an indicator of a
planet’s hospitality to life.
Of the eight solar twins they’ve studied so far, seven appear to contain
much more thorium than our Sun — which suggests that any planets
orbiting those stars probably contain more thorium, too.
That, in turn, means that the interior of the planets are probably warmer than ours, researchers said in a statement.
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