BBC Knowledge June 2017

(Jeff_L) #1
The star is relatively small, just 8 per cent the mass
of the Sun, and would appear to glow salmon pink
when observed from the surface of the planets,
the researchers say.
Now that astronomers know that the planets are
there, the next job is to find out what they are really like.
The first step is to make an accurate determination
of their densities. When searching for habitable worlds,
rocky planets are the clear preference because –
put simply – they provide a surface for life forms
to walk, slither or otherwise move across.
The European Space Agency (ESA) will launch
CHEOPS (CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite) in 2018.
The main science goals of the mission are to measure
the densities of planets with radii between one
and six times of Earth. The TRAPPIST-1 system
will be high on the list. 
The next step will be to analyse the planets’
atmospheres to see if any look like they could be
habitable. “The main goal will be trying to detect
the signature of water,” said CHEOPS scientist
Dr Vincent Bourrier. Water vapour in a planet’s
atmosphere could betray widespread oceans and a
water cycle. Its signature appears in the infrared region of
the spectrum and this is where the NASA-built James
Webb Space Telescope (JWST) comes in.
ESA will launch the JWST in the same year as CHEOPS.
With its 6.5m-diameter infrared mirror, JWST will make
analysing exoplanet atmospheres easier than ever.
One of its first targets is likely to be the seven worlds
of the TRAPPIST-1 solar system.

“ROCKY


PLANETS ARE


THE CLEAR


PREFERENCE


BECAUSE THEY


PROVIDE


A SURFACE FOR


LIFE FORMS”


While finding water vapour would increase the belief
that the planet under investigation is potentially habitable,
there are other factors that could affect a planet’s ability
to support life.
To investigate those, Bourrier and his team have
already used the Hubble Space Telescope to look
at the ultraviolet signature of TRAPPIST-1’s two
innermost planets. His work shows that those planets
could have had their atmospheres completely
eroded away by the radiation from the star –
rendering the planets barren. Could this have
happened to the other worlds of TRAPPIST-1?
Actually proving that a planet is habitable may
be really tough. Astronomers will have to look for
‘biomarkers’. These are gases that only exist together
in an atmosphere because they are being replenished
by the metabolisms of living creatures. Oxygen and
methane are good examples in our own atmosphere.
So far, there are no firm plans to build a space telescope
capable of making such an exacting measurement,
although NASA and ESA have both studied
engineering concepts.
NASA’s next exoplanet mission, the Transiting
Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), also launching
next year, could reveal many more solar systems
like TRAPPIST-1. This mission will survey 200,000 stars
and is expected to discover thousands of exoplanets,
from the size of Earth up to Jupiter and larger.”

Stuart Clark is an astronomy writer. His most recent book
is the The Search For Earth’s Twin (Quercus).

As the planets in
the TRAPPIST-1 system are
so close together, they’d be
visible in each other’s skies,
as seen in this illustration

PHOTOS:


NASA X3


EXPERT COMMENT

24 June 2017

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