(Image credit: Robert Lea)
Scientists have founded that a likely habitable planet is having its atmosphere stripped, a process that may eventually render the world, Trappist-1e, inhospitable to life. The stripping seems to be caused by electric currents made as the planet races around its red dwarf host star.
It’s important invention because the Trappist-1 system, in which this exoplanet orbits a small red dwarf star, has been one of the primary targets in the hunt for alien life. Of the seven rocky Earth-like worlds in the system, at least 3 are present in the habitable zone, an area around a star that is neither too warm nor too cool to allow a planet to support liquid water.
A planet without an atmosphere can’t have liquid water, however, even if it is in the habitable zone, also known as the “Goldilocks zone.” This shows that, though Trappist-1e may be in the habitable zone of the red dwarf Trappist-1, present 40 light-years from Earth, its habitability may be fleeting.
The same phenomenon impacting Trappist-1e’s atmosphere could be affecting the atmospheres of the other planets in this habitable zone as well, which is not a good news for the possibility of finding life in this system.
Ways to Snatch an Exoplanet’s Atmosphere
Trappist-1e is likely Earth-sized, yet has around 0.7 times the mass of our planet. It is the fourth planet from its star, orbiting at just 0.028 times the gap between Earth and the sun, completing one orbit in just 6.1 Earth days.
Despite this proximity, because Trappist-1 is too much small and cool than the sun, its habitable zone is much closer to its surface when compared to our star’s habitable zone. To that end, it isn’t radiation from this red dwarf that seems to be stripping the TRAPPIST-1e’s atmosphere, but rather a wind of charged particles blown from the star called the “stellar wind.”
“We saw how the space weather changes through the planet’s orbit, with TRAPPIST-1e transitions very quickly between very different stellar wind conditions and pressures, leading to a sort of pulsing compression and relaxation of the planetary magnetic field,” Cecilia Garraffo, team member and an astrophysicist at Harvard & Smithsonian, told us. “This drives empower electric currents in the upper atmosphere — the ionosphere — that heat up the atmosphere just like an electric heater.”
Garraffo described that Earth also experiences types in the solar wind, which causes a similar heating of our atmosphere. The difference is that the heating felt by TRAPPIST-1e is up to 100,000 times more powerful than what Earth experiences with the sun’s solar winds. That’s because Trappist-1e moves rapidly around its star, and the motion drives powerful ionospheric currents that dissipate and make high heating, which the team calls “voltage-driven Joule heating.”
Even though the team had predicted this effect back in 2017, the scientists were shocked by just how powerful they have now found it to be.
“It could be so strong for TRAPPIST-1e that the heat necessarily evaporates the upper atmosphere,” Garraffo said. “Over millions of years, the planet could lose its atmosphere completely to this phenomenon.”
The team’s research shows there are more than a couple of ways for a planet to lose its atmosphere.
Team member and Lowell Center for Space Science & Technology researcher Offer Cohen told us that, typically, the loss of exoplanet atmospheres are by some external process. This contain powerful radiation from the star, which can cause the atmosphere to heat up and escape, or charged particles in the stellar wind pelting planets, causing a strong stripping effect.
“In this case, the heating of the atmosphere, and its loss as a result, are driven only by the fast planetary motion. So, the planet dooms itself to lose its atmosphere by simply moving around,” Cohen said. “It’s like the situation when we are too lazy to clean the roof of our car from snow, and we just start driving, hoping that the air moving around the car would do the work for us and take the snow off — at least that’s what we do in the Boston area.
“I think that it is very cool that planets can do this with their atmosphere.”
What About the Other Trappist-1 Planets?
On Earth, our magnetosphere prevents our atmosphere by diverting charged particles down magnetic field lines and out behind our planet. Mars, lacking a strong magnetic field, has had its atmosphere stripped by solar winds and harsh solar radiation. In fact, the Red Planet might lost its water to space as a result.
Trappist-1e is also considered to have a magnetosphere, but these findings show it might not be enough to prevent atmospheric stripping.
“Normally, a planet’s magnetic field acts as a preventive bubble, but around TRAPPIST-1e, this bubble is compromised. The planet’s magnetic field join with the star’s, making pathways that allow the star’s particles to hit the planet directly,” Garraffo said. “This not only strips away the atmosphere but also heats it up significantly, leaving TRAPPIST-1e and its neighbors vulnerable to losing their atmospheres completely.”
Trappist-1e is the fourth planet from the red dwarf star at the heart of this fascinating planetary system of rocky worlds. Astronomers have recently invented that Trappist-1b, the nearest exoplanet to the star, seems to have already lost its atmosphere.
The team thinks voltage-driven Joule heating could also be effecting Trappist-1f and Trappist-1g, stripping them of their atmospheres as well, albeit to a lesser extent than they see happening with Trappist-1e. That’s because, at 0.038 and 0.04683 times the distance between Earth and the sun from their star respectively, these planets are moving slower through the red dwarf’s stellar winds than Trappist-1e is.
“Closer-in planets of Trappist-1 will have an even more extreme fate, and further out ones a bit milder,” Garraffo said. “I would think that all Trappist-1 planets are going to have a tough time holding on to any atmosphere.”
The team’s findings could have implications outside the Trappist-1 system as well as in the search for habitable exoplanets and life outside the solar system. They suggest exoplanets close to their stars have likely lost their atmospheres even if they are well within the habitable zone of that star.
The results could further help show which stars could host planets with molecules that specify the presence of life: Biomarkers.
“Our research shows such low-mass host stars are might not the most promising for hosting planets with atmospheres,” Garraffo concluded. “Identifying which host stars can be conducive to habitable planets and observing those atmospheric transits with James Webb Space Telescope and future observatories, but also building the technology to interpret those results in terms of biomarkers.”