PRESS RELEASE, January 2008
HABITABLE REAL ESTATE AROUND NEARBY STARS
CONTACTS:
Justin R. Cantrell
Doctoral Candidate in Astronomy
Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA
email: cantrell AT chara.gsu.edu
Todd J. Henry
Director, RECONS (Research Consortium on Nearby Stars), www.recons.org
Professor of Astronomy
Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA
phone: 404-413-6054
email: thenry AT chara.gsu.edu
Astronomers aren't terribly worried about the ups and downs of the
real estate market in the Sun's neighborhood. In fact, they're
willing to look at all of the options, regardless of what type of star
provides the light and heat. A group from Georgia State University is
using the data they have collected on the nearest stars to estimate
what they call the ``habitable real estate" around each of the Sun's
neighbors. This habitable real estate is defined as the region around
a star where a planet could sustain liquid water.
The nearby real estate market is being investigated by the RECONS
group, which has been using relatively small telescopes to study
nearby stars at the National Science Foundation's Cerro Tololo
Inter-American Observatory in the Chilean Andes since 1999.
``Some might call us nosy neighbors, but we feel that there's a lot
more to learn about the habitable zones around the nearest star
systems," explains Justin Cantrell, who is leading the real estate
work. ``We want to know how much habitable area there is associated
with each stellar system, and for each different class of star found
among the Sun's neighbors."
The team is using measurements of the stars' observed brightnesses at
optical and infrared wavelengths and the stars' distances found via
the trigonometric parallax method. Together, these data allow them to
derive the stars' intrinsic luminosities, colors, and distances, which
ultimately yield accurate estimates of the stars' temperatures and
sizes. The team is the first to make a concerted effort to make the
measurements for all of the nearest stars, and the first to look at
each different type of star in the sample --- whether the stars are
bigger and hotter than the Sun like white Sirius, similar to the Sun
like yellow Alpha Centauri A, or smaller and cooler than the Sun, like
the orange and red stars that make up most of the nearest stars,
including Alpha Centauri B and Proxima Centauri.
``Once we have good values for the temperatures and sizes of the
nearby stars, we can estimate how hot planets will be at different
distances from the stars," Cantrell explains. ``We consider those
stars that would have surface temperatures suitable for liquid water
to be in the traditional habitable zone."
The group was keenly interested in the habitable real estate around
red dwarf stars, which are 50-90% smaller than the Sun and much
cooler. Although they comprise more than 70% of the Galactic
population, they are often overlooked as hosts of planets suitable for
life because they shine so feebly. To the group's surprise, although
there are only three Sun-like stars of spectral type G and 44 red
dwarfs of spectral type M within 5 parsecs (16.4 light years), all the
red dwarf habitable real estate added together did not equal the
habitable zone of even one Sun like star. It's much like finding that
a single large island has more good places to live than several dozen
small islands.
Cantrell's graduate advisor, Todd Henry, nonetheless thinks red dwarfs
might still be intriguing places to look for planets, and life on
them. ``When you have forty four options for planetary systems around
red dwarfs versus only three for stars like the Sun, it seems we
shouldn't give up on the Sun's smaller cousins just yet. You never
know where the liquid water may turn out to be." We now know there is
liquid water on Saturn's moon Enceladus and suspect water on Jupiter's
moon Europa, both of which are far removed from the prime real estate
in our Solar System.
Another area of interest for the team was to understand the effects on
habitable zones when more than one star is in a system. Roughly half
of stars like the Sun have companion stars (called binary star
systems), while about a third of red dwarfs have stellar companions.
In many such systems, the stars are separated by enough distance to
leave good real estate around each star where life could settle in
comfortably.
For example, the nearest star system contains three stars --- the
Sun-like star Alpha Centauri A and the somewhat cooler star B in close
orbit around one another, and the red dwarf Proxima Centauri that is
much farther away. Stars A and B orbit in such a way that the
distance separating them changes from similar to the distance between
the Sun and Saturn to a bit larger than the distance between the Sun
and Neptune. ``It's like having a second Sun shifting from where
Saturn is to where Neptune is," Cantrell explains. The surprising
result was that when the light and heat of the two stars was combined,
the team found that the other star in the system did not significantly
change the size of the habitable zone, regardless of where it was in
its orbit. ``We expected that Alpha Centauri A and B might interfere
with each others' habitable zones, but the areas of the available good
real estate around each star is affected by less than 1%," says
Cantrell. Distant Proxima is completely unaffected by the other two
stars. Apparently, the real estate market in the nearest star system
has not one, but three promising locations for life.
This research has enjoyed the consistent support of the National
Science Foundation (grant AST-0507711), the Cerro-Tololo
Inter-american Observatory (part of the National Optical Astronomy
Observatory, which is operated by the Association of Universities for
Research in Astronomy Inc. (AURA), under a cooperative agreement with
the National Science Foundation), The SMARTS Consortium, NASA's SIM
PlanetQuest, and Georgia State University.
The relative sizes of traditional habitable zones are shown around
four of the nearest stars. Sirius A is the brightest star in the
night sky, while Alpha Centauri A, B, and Proxima Centauri are three
stars forming the nearest star system, which is a triple. At this
scale, the habitable zone around the red dwarf Proxima is so small
that it is only about the size of a period at the end of this
sentence.
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