Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

1,200 Light-years Away, This Planet May Have Active Life

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 May, 2016 12:19 PM
    A planet which is about 1,200 light-years from Earth and in all probabilities has surface liquid water is a good prospect for a habitable world, reports researchers from University of California-Los Angeles.
     
    Named Kepler-62f, the planet is situated in the direction of the constellation Lyra and is approximately 40 percent larger than Earth.
     
    "At that size, Kepler-62f is within the range of planets that are likely to be rocky and possibly could have oceans," said Aomawa Shields, lead author and a astrophysics postdoctoral fellow.
     
    NASA's Kepler mission discovered the planetary system that includes Kepler-62f in 2013 and it identified Kepler-62f as the outermost of five planets orbiting a star that is smaller and cooler than the Sun.
     
    But the mission did not reveal information about its composition or atmosphere or the shape of its orbit.
     
    To determine whether the planet could sustain life, the team came up with possible scenarios about what its atmosphere might be like and what the shape of its orbit might be.
     
    "We found there are multiple atmospheric compositions that allow it to be warm enough to have surface liquid water. This makes it a strong candidate for a habitable planet," added Shields.
     
    On Earth, carbon dioxide makes up 0.04 percent of the atmosphere.
     
    Because Kepler-62f is much farther away from its star than Earth is from the Sun, it would need to have dramatically more carbon dioxide to be warm enough to maintain liquid water on its surface, and to keep from freezing.
     
    The team ran computer simulations and found many scenarios that allow it to be habitable, assuming different amounts of carbon dioxide in its atmosphere.
     
    Shields said that for the planet to be consistently habitable throughout its entire year, it would require an atmosphere that is three to five times thicker than Earth's and composed entirely of carbon dioxide.
     
    Having such a high concentration of carbon dioxide would be possible for the planet because, given how far it is from its star, the gas could build up in the planet's atmosphere as temperatures get colder to keep the planet warm.
     
    The scientists made their calculations of the shape of the planet's possible orbital path using an existing computer model called HNBody.
     
    The research was published online in the journal Astrobiology.
     
    According to Shields, the same technique could be applied to understand whether exoplanets much closer to Earth could be habitable, so long as the planets are likely to be rocky.
     
    "This will help us understand how likely certain planets are to be habitable over a wide range of factors, for which we don't yet have data from telescopes," she noted.
     
    More than 2,300 exoplanets have been confirmed so far and a few thousand others are considered planet candidates, but only a couple dozen are known to be in the "habitable zone".

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    NASA's New Horizons To Become The First Spacecraft To Fly By Pluto

    NASA's New Horizons To Become The First Spacecraft To Fly By Pluto
    On Tuesday, however, scientists will get their closest and clearest look at the dwarf planet when NASA's New Horizons spacecraft is expected to get within 12,500 kilometres of its surface.

    NASA's New Horizons To Become The First Spacecraft To Fly By Pluto

    Why Female Bosses Freak Men Out

    Why Female Bosses Freak Men Out
    Men may feel threatened by female bosses and act more assertively towards them than male supervisors, new research says.

    Why Female Bosses Freak Men Out

    Baby Found Awake In Coffin During Funeral

    Baby Found Awake In Coffin During Funeral
    A newborn baby, declared dead at a hospital in Kenya, shocked his entire family when he woke up smiling in the coffin, a media report said on Wednesday.

    Baby Found Awake In Coffin During Funeral

    Giant Robots From Japan, US To Face Off

    Giant Robots From Japan, US To Face Off
    Weighing in at just under 4,000 kg, Japan's metal monster will soon take on the 5,400-kg US contender in what may well be the newest form of entertainment, like that widely depicted in works of science fiction.

    Giant Robots From Japan, US To Face Off

    Sydney Opera House Bans Selfie Sticks

    Sydney Opera House Bans Selfie Sticks
    Australia's Sydney Opera House has joined a growing list of cultural institutions worldwide to crack down on the use of the telescopic camera attachment that gives a wider field of view for "selfie"-style photographs, media reported on Monday.

    Sydney Opera House Bans Selfie Sticks

    Selfie Reflects Your Personality

    Selfie Reflects Your Personality
    Does a selfie reveal something about the person-in-pic? In fact, your style of taking a selfie can disclose various secrets of your personality, says a new study.

    Selfie Reflects Your Personality