Title: Lecture 22: Habitable Zones Around Stars
1Lecture 22 Habitable Zones Around Stars
Meteo 466
2Liquid Water is Essential for Life(as we know it)
- Clever biochemists have suggested that
non-carbon-based, non-water-dependent life could
possibly exist - Nonetheless, the best place to begin the search
for life is on planets like the Earth - This means that we should look within the
conventional habitable zone around nearby stars
3Definitions(from Michael Hart, Icarus, 1978)
- Habitable zone (HZ) -- the region around a star
in which an Earth-like planet could maintain
liquid water on its surface at some instant in
time - Continuously habitable zone (CHZ) -- the region
in which a planet could remain habitable for some
specified period of time (e.g., 4.6 billion
years)
4Michael Harts calculations(Icarus, 1978, 1979)
- 4.6-Gyr CHZ around our own Sun is quite narrow
- 0.95 AU Runaway greenhouse
- 1.01 AU Runaway glaciation
- CHZs around other spectral types are even
narrower - Corollary Earth may be the only habitable planet
in our galaxy
5Finding the boundaries of the habitable zone
- Inner edge determined by loss of water via
runaway or moist greenhouse effect - Venus is a case in point
6J. F. Kasting, Icarus (1988)
7Implications Inner edge of the HZ is at S/So ?
1.1, corresponding to a semi-major axis of 0.95
AU - This could be overly pessimistic if (as
seems likely) clouds provide negative climate
feedback
8Finding the boundaries of the habitable zone
- Inner edge determined by loss of water via
runaway or moist greenhouse effect - Outer edge depends on how large a planets
greenhouse effect might be - Conservative approach Assume that CO2 and H2O
are the only important greenhouse gases - Less conservative approach Consider CH4 as well
9The Carbonate-Silicate Cycle
(metamorphism)
- This cycle regulates Earths atmospheric CO2
level - over long time scales and has acted as a
planetary - thermostat during much of Earths history
- It also ensures that the liquid water habitable
zone - around the Sun and other stars is fairly wide
10- However, CO2 itself begins to condense as one
moves farther away from the Sun ? outer edge is
at 1.6 to 2.0 AU
11Mars Flux calculations at Ts 273 K
- Minimum solar flux to support
- 273 K on Mars is S/S0 0.86
- The solar flux at Mars orbit is
- 0.43 times that at Earth
- ? Outer edge of the HZ is at
- S/S0 0.86?0.43 0.37
- The solar flux varies as 1/r2,
- so the HZ outer edge is at
- r (1/0.37)0.5 ? 1.6 AU
- Warming by CO2 clouds might
- extend this to 2.0 AU
SEFF FIR/FS
J.F. Kasting, Icarus (1991)
12Boundaries of the 4.6-b.y. CHZ
- CHZ boundaries are somewhat different because the
planet must remain habitable for (in this case)
4.6 b.y. - Inner edge remains at 0.95 AU because the Sun is
as bright now as it ever has been - Outer edge moves in because the Sun was 30 less
bright early in its history - Assume that the HZ outer edge is at 1.8 AU
- CHZ outer edge is at 1.8?(0.7)0.5 ? 1.5 AU
- Is this broad, or is this narrow?
13Titius-Bode Law
- Planets are geometrically spaced for reasons of
orbital - stability (although this statement applies more
directly to - giant planets than to terrestrial ones)
- If other planetary systems have similar spacing,
then the - number of planets within the habitable zone may
be large
Ref. J. K. Beatty et al. (1999), Ch. 2.
14We can also calculate HZs and CHZs for other
types of stars
15Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) Diagram
See also The Earth System, p. 191
http//observe.arc.nasa.gov/nasa/space/stellardeat
h/stellardeath_1ai.html
16ZAMS habitable zones
- Gold strip indicates the habitable zone
- ZAMS means zero age main sequence
Kasting et al., Icarus (1993)
17Planets around early-type stars
- Planets orbiting stars earlier than about F0 have
at least two problems - Short main sequence lifetime (2 b.y. for an F0
star) - High levels of UV radiation (about 20 times that
of the Earth)
18Earth-like planets around F, G, and K stars
- The Earth is assumed to be at a distance
equivalent to 1 AU in the - extrasolar planet system. First, scale the
orbital radius by ?L, then - move the planet inward or outward until its
calculated surface - temperature is 288 K.
Segura et al., Astrobiology (2003)
19Earth-like planets around F, G, and K stars
Temperature
Ozone number density
- The planet around the F star develops a super
ozone layer because of - the abundance of short-wavelength UV radiation
(? lt 200 nm) that can - dissociate O2 ? UV is not a problem once O2
levels become high
Segura et al., Astrobiology (2003)
20Possible problems for planets around M stars
- Tidal locking
- But this can probably be overcome by atmospheric
and oceanic heat transport - Lack of magnetic field ? atmospheres may be
removed by flares and sputtering (H. Lammer et
al., Astrobiol., 2007) - Initial deficiency in volatiles due to smaller
orbits, hotter accretion environment, more
energetic collisions (J. Lissauer, Ap. J., 2007)
GRIN Great Images in NASA http//www.fanboy.com/s
cience/
21The galactic habitable zone
- There may also be a preferred time and location
within the galaxy for habitable planets to exist - Stars that are too close to the center of the
galaxy are subject to frequent near-collisions
and more supernovae and gamma ray bursts - Stars that are too far out in the galaxy (or that
evolved too early in its history) may be too
metal-poor - Fortunately, though, the GHZ is probably large
compared to the local solar neighborhood
Ref. Lineweaver et al., Science (2004)
22Conclusions
- Habitable zones around F, G, and early K stars
are relatively wide - Stars earlier than about F0 are bad candidates
for harboring habitable planets, primarily
because of their short main sequence lifetimes - M stars have good CHZs but their planets are
beset with many other problems (tidal locking,
atmospheric loss, lack of initial volatiles?)