Scientists say wobbling planets may support life

From NASA Reports
Tilted orbits could make some planets habitable. Image: NASA's Goddard Flight Center.
Tilted orbits could make some planets habitable. Image: NASA's Goddard Flight Center.

For years, scientists have called them “Goldilocks” planets. Like Earth, they are neither too close nor too far from the sun – just the right distance to support life. But as it turns out, some planets that don’t fit the Goldilocks description may be habitable.


     Planets that pivot and lean one way and then change orientation might be habitable, according to NASA scientists and university scientists affiliated with the NASA Astrobiology Institute.
     The climate on these wobbling worlds could prevent them from becoming glacier-covered ice lockers, even if they are somewhat far from their stars. And with some water on the surface long term, such planets could maintain favorable conditions for life.
     "Planets like these are far enough from their stars that it would be easy to write them off as frozen and poor targets for exploration, but, in fact, they might be well-suited to supporting life," said Shawn Domagal-Goldman, an astrobiologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "This could expand our idea of what a habitable planet looks like and where habitable planets might be found."
     The new modeling considers planets that have the same mass as Earth, orbit a sunlike star and have one or two gas giants orbiting nearby. In some cases, gravitational pulls from those massive planets could change the orientation of the terrestrial world's axis of rotation within tens to hundreds of thousands of years – a blink of an eye in geologic terms.
     Though it might seem far-fetched for a world to experience such seesawing action, scientists have spotted an arrangement of planets where that could happen in orbit around the star Upsilon Andromedae. The orbits of two enormous planets were found to be inclined at an angle of 30 degrees relative to each other. One planet was farther from the star than the other planet.
     Compared to our solar system, that arrangement looks extreme. The orbits of Earth and its seven neighboring planets differ by 7 degrees at most. Even the tilted orbit of the dwarf planet Pluto, which really stands out, is offset by a relatively modest 17 degrees.
     "Knowing that this kind of planetary system existed raised the question of whether a world could be habitable under such conditions," said Rory Barnes, a scientist at the University of Washington in Seattle, who was part of the team that studied the orbits of the two Andromedae planets.
     The concept is explored in a paper published in the April issue of Astrobiology and available online. John Armstrong of Weber State University in Ogden, Utah, led the team, which includes Barnes, Domagal-Goldman and other colleagues.
     The team ran thousands of simulations for planets in 17 varieties of simplified planetary systems. The models the researchers built allowed them to adjust the tilt of the planetary orbits, the lean in the axes of rotation and the ability of the terrestrial planet's atmosphere to let in light.
     In some cases, tilted orbits can cause a planet to wobble like a top almost done spinning – and that wobbling should have a big impact on the planet's glaciers and climate. Earth's history indicates that the amount of sunlight glaciers receive strongly affects how much they grow and melt. Extreme wobbling would cause the poles to point directly at the sun from time to time, melting the glaciers. As a result, some planets would be able to maintain liquid water on the surface despite being located nearly twice as far from their stars as Earth is from the sun.
    "In those cases, the habitable zone could be extended much farther from the star than we normally expect," said Armstrong, the lead author of the paper. "Rather than working against habitability, the rapid changes in the orientation of the planet could turn out be a real boon sometimes."

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