A Nearby Frozen Planet May Once Have Supported Life
It's just 40 light years away.
John von Radowitz & Thomas Tamblyn— Press Association
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A frozen planet, in the nearby Trappist-1 system may have been warm and habitable for hundreds of millions of years, say scientists.
Trappist-1 is a system that gained celebrity status a few months ago after it was discovered that it contained not one, but seven Earth-like planets.
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The outermost of these planet, Trappist-1h, is currently an ice ball with an average surface temperature of minus 100C - but this may not always have been the case, the research suggests.
Astronomers made the discovery after studying the orbits of seven planets circling Trappist-1, a cool dwarf star 40 light years away in the constellation Aquarius.
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The scientists found that the star’s planets were gravitationally linked in a complex dance known as “orbital resonance”, which was probably forged early in the life of the system.
Tracing back the history of Trappist-1h, they showed that the planet was likely to have spent several hundred million years in a much warmer state when its host star was younger and brighter.
Lead researcher Rodrigo Luger, a doctoral student at the University of Washington in the US, said: “We could therefore be looking at a planet that was once habitable and has since frozen over, which is amazing to contemplate and great for follow-up studies.”
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The study, published in the journal Nature Astronomy, is based on data gathered by Nasa’s Kepler Space Telescope.
Three more of Trappist-1’s planets appear to lie within the star’s habitable zone, the orbital band within which temperatures are mild enough to permit liquid surface water and possibly life.
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