Habitable Zone
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Transcript Habitable Zone
Habitability: Making a
habitable planet
26 January 2016
Introduction
Define Habitability
The Habitable Zone
Environment of early Earth
Defining Habitability
Defining Habitability
What do we mean when we say
habitable?
Earth-like animal life: specific requirements
Microbial life - broader set of conditions
Defining Habitability
Defining Habitability
What do we mean when we say
habitable?
Earth-like animal life: specific requirements
(oxygen, water, dry land, temperature
range)
Microbial life - broader set of conditions
(more extreme conditions ok)
Defining Habitability
Common basic requirements
for life
Water
Stable climate
Defining Habitability
What stabilizes the climate?
Size - long-term heat source
Stellar evolution - incoming solar energy
Impact rate - could result in climate
change
Presence of large, natural satellite prevents large swings in obliquity
Oceans - regulate global temperatures
The Habitable Zone
Habitable Zones
Why is Earth the only (as far as we
know) habitable planet in our solar
system?
2 main properties:
Abundant liquid water
Environmental conditions that maintain
liquid water
The Habitable Zone
Liquid Water is the Key!
Required temperature: 273-373 K
Use this as simple requirement for
identifying possibly habitable planets
Where do planets in this temperature
range orbit?
The Habitable Zone
Liquid Water
Where do planets in
this temperature
range orbit?
Called the Habitable
Zone
The Habitable Zone
How does star type affect HZ?
Different sized
stars have
different
luminosities
T goes as L1/4
Brighter stars
have HZs
farther out
The Habitable Zone
How does star type affect HZ?
Main sequence stars
have different
luminosities
throughout their
lifetimes
Continuously
Habitable Zone:
maintains conditions
suitable for life
throughout the
lifetime of star
The Habitable Zone
Is it that simple?
Albedo, a
Atmosphere
greenhouse –
chemical absorbers
act like a warm
blanket
Moves HZ
inwards
Moves HZ
outwards
The Habitable Zone
Role of the Carbon Cycle
Kasting proposed
the Carbon Dioxide
Thermostat
Extends to HZ for
Earth-like planets
Keeps off
temperature
extremes
Carbon sources:
Volcanic
outgassing
Decarbonation
Organic carbon
Carbon sinks:
Calcium
carbonate
formation
Photosynthesis
How the CO2 cycle buffers the planet’s temperature
The Habitable Zone
Continuously Habitable Zone
Inner edge: 0.95 AU
Outer edge: 1.15 AU
Were other
planets habitable
in the past?
Will other planets
be habitable in
the future?
The Habitable Zone
Mars:
Once Habitable?
Still Habitable?
Early Mars
Evidence of large
amounts of flowing liquid
water
Warmer temperatures:
Heat from interior would
have been higher
Warm climate from
greenhouse gases or
CO2 clouds
Current Mars
Gullies may be due
to underground
water
Carbon cycle not as
active as on Earth
The Habitable Zone
Characteristics that make a
habitable planet
•Size of planet
•Internal heat comes
from
•Accretional heat
•Differentiation
•Radiogenic decay
•Allows for plate
tectonics
•Mars cooled
quickly, so no
plate tectonics at
present
•Other Heat sources to
sustain liquid water
•Geothermal
•Iceland
•Tidal
•Europa
The Habitable Zone
Characteristics that make a
habitable system
Star Type: stable
luminous stars
necessary
Sufficiently long
lifetime for life to
evolve
Large enough so
planets don’t tidally
lock
•Star system
•Single star: allows for
stable orbit
•Binary system:
•Fewer stable orbits
exist
•HZ calculated on
individual basis
The Habitable Zone
Characteristics that make a
habitable neighborhood
Galactic Habitable Zone
Area of high metallicity (elements w/ Z>2)
Outer region of galaxy
Lower stellar density
Lower radiation levels
Discussion Topics:
• How common are habitable zones?
• What does this say about the
likelihood of life?
• What stars are the best to search?
Early Earth
Environment of early
Earth
• Evidence of a habitable planet 3.8
Ga
– Geological evidence near Isua,
Greenland
– Limestone and sandstone
– We can infer presence of liquid water
– Earth must have had temperatures
similar to today’s
Early Earth
Liquid water 3.8 Ga?
• Faint young Sun
– Sun was 25-30% less luminous
– Simple energy balance shows Earth’s
surface temperature would have been below
273 K
• Other heat sources
– Geological activity
• More internal heat from radioactive decay and
primordial heat
• Plate tectonics release CO2 - greenhouse traps
heat
Early Earth
Snowball Earth
• Global glaciations brought on by disruptions in
the carbon cycle
– Up to 4 occurred between 750 Ma and 580 Ma ago
– Geological record shows layered deposits in tropics
attributable to glacial erosion
• CO2 sinks would cease, but sources would
continue. 350 times current CO2 levels would
accumulate to create a severe greenhouse,
causing the ice to melt w/in a few hundred
years.
• All eukaryotes today are from the survivors of
snowball earth
Summary
Habitable Zone: area around a star
where liquid water can exist on the
surface
Continuously Habitable Zone: the region
where water would exist over the entire
star lifetime