Published online: 29 May 2007; | doi:10.1038/news070528-1 / http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070528/full/070528-1.html
Red dwarfs could harbour life
Planets around commonest stars in our Galaxy might be warm and safe.Geoff Brumfiel


| Ten planets have been found orbiting red dwarfs so far. ESO |
|
The
most common type of star in the Galaxy may be more hospitable to life
than was previously believed, say astronomers who have calculated how
much radiation planets orbiting such stars would receive.
Red
dwarfs - cool, low-mass stars - make up more than 75% of the stars in
the Milky Way. So far, ten planets have been found around red dwarfs,
including one announced on 24 April that appears to be on the edge of a
'habitable zone', the region around a star thought to be capable of
supporting life.
Many
astronomers are sceptical that life could survive around red dwarfs.
Because the stars are cooler than, say, our Sun, their habitable zones
lie much closer to the star. That means that planets in the zone could
be exposed to damaging levels of ultraviolet and X-ray radiation.
But
life might be able to stand the radiation - if the planet was like
Earth, say Edward Guinan of Villanova University, Pennsylvania, and his
collaborators.
The
researchers examined the X-ray and ultraviolet output of 20 red dwarfs
and found that if a planet had an atmosphere to scatter ultraviolet
radiation and a magnetic field to deflect harmful particles, any life
would be spared most of the radiation. The results were released on 28
May at the American Astronomical Society's biannual meeting in
Honolulu, Hawaii.
Hawaiian nightsPeriodic
solar flares could still deliver enough radiation to sterilize animals,
says Guinan. Plus, 'tidal locking', which forces a moon or planet's
rotation to synch with that of the body it orbits, would probably leave
one side in continual, searing light.
But, Guinan says, winds could circulate warm air to the night side, keeping it as warm as a summer night in Hawaii.
And
red dwarfs are very stable, so the planet could remain habitable for
billions of years, unlike our Sun, which will support life only for
another 1.5 billion years.
"It's not as bad a place as people thought," says Alan
Boss, a theorist with the Carnegie Institution in Washington DC.
Because red dwarfs are common throughout the Galaxy, Boss believes that
future missions, such as NASA's Kepler satellite, scheduled for launch
next year, may be able to spot the eclipse of Earth-sized planets
around such a star.
But spotting life on such a planet would probably require even more powerful space-based telescopes.