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{{Short description|Known extent to which a planet is suitable for life}}
<!--Please familiarize yourself with the referencing system for this article before adding references or altering those that exist. Here mn|description|# is used for main references; fn|# is used for footnotes.-->
{{Redirect|Habitable planet|a list of potentially habitable planets found to date|List of potentially habitable exoplanets}}
]'s conditions, as it is the only ] currently known to harbor ].]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}}
'''Planetary habitability''' is the measure of an astronomical body's potential to develop and sustain ]. It may be applied both to ]s and to the ]s of planets.
], as this is the only ] known to support ].]]


'''Planetary habitability''' is the measure of a ]'s or a ]'s potential to ] and maintain an environment hospitable to ].<ref name="NASA-20150407">{{cite web |last1=Dyches |first1=Preston |last2=Chou |first2=Felcia |title=The Solar System and Beyond is Awash in Water |url=http://www.nasa.gov/jpl/the-solar-system-and-beyond-is-awash-in-water/ |date=7 April 2015 |work=] |access-date=8 April 2015 |archive-date=10 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150410113514/http://www.nasa.gov/jpl/the-solar-system-and-beyond-is-awash-in-water/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Life may be ] on a planet or satellite endogenously. Research suggests that life may also be transferred from one body to another, through a hypothetical process known as ].<ref name='NASA strategy 2015'>{{citation |last=NASA |title=NASA Astrobiology Strategy |url=https://nai.nasa.gov/media/medialibrary/2016/04/NASA_Astrobiology_Strategy_2015_FINAL_041216.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161118105817/https://nai.nasa.gov/media/medialibrary/2016/04/NASA_Astrobiology_Strategy_2015_FINAL_041216.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 November 2016 |date=October 2015 }}</ref> Environments do not need to contain life to be considered habitable nor are accepted ]s (HZ) the only areas in which life might arise.<ref name="Seager 2013">{{cite journal |title=Exoplanet Habitability |journal=Science |year=2013 |last=Seager |first=Sara |volume=340 |issue=577 |pages=577–581 |doi=10.1126/science.1232226 |pmid=23641111 |bibcode=2013Sci...340..577S |s2cid=206546351 }}</ref>
The only absolute requirement for life is an ] but the notion of planetary habitability implies that many other ], ], and ] criteria must be met before an astronomical body is able to support life. As the existence of ] is currently unknown, planetary habitability is largely an ] of conditions on Earth and the characteristics of the ] and ] which appear favorable to life's flourishing. Of particular interest is the set of factors that has sustained complex, ] ]s and not merely ] organisms on this planet. Research and theory in this regard is a component of ] and the emerging discipline of ].


As the existence of ] is unknown, planetary habitability is largely an ] of conditions on Earth and the characteristics of the ] and ] which appear favorable to life's flourishing.<ref>{{cite journal | title = Defining and predicting sustainability | last1 = Costanza | first1 = Robert | last2 = Bernard | first2 = C. Patten | date = December 1995 | journal = Ecological Economics | volume = 15 | issue = 3 | pages = 193–196 | doi = 10.1016/0921-8009(95)00048-8| bibcode = 1995EcoEc..15..193C }}</ref> Of particular interest are those factors that have sustained complex, ] organisms on Earth and not just simpler, ] creatures. Research and theory in this regard is a component of a number of natural sciences, such as ], ] and the emerging discipline of ].
The idea that planets beyond Earth might host life is an ancient one, though historically it was framed by ] as much as ]&nbsp;{{fn|1}}. The late 20th century saw two breakthroughs in the field. To begin with, the observation and robotic ] of other planets and moons within the solar system has provided critical information on defining habitability criteria and allowed for substantial geophysical comparisons between the Earth and other bodies. The discovery of ]s — beginning in ]<!----> and accelerating thereafter — was the second milestone. It confirmed that the Sun is not unique in hosting planets and expanded the habitability research horizon beyond our own solar system.


An absolute requirement for life is an ] source, and the notion of planetary habitability implies that many other ], ], and ] criteria must be met before an astronomical body can support life. In its astrobiology roadmap, ] has defined the principal habitability criteria as "extended regions of liquid water,<ref name="NASA-20150407"/> conditions favorable for the assembly of complex ], and energy sources to sustain ]".<ref name=NASA1>{{cite web|url=http://astrobiology.arc.nasa.gov/roadmap/g1.html |title=Goal 1: Understand the nature and distribution of habitable environments in the Universe |publisher=] |work=Astrobiology: Roadmap |access-date=11 August 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110117011137/http://astrobiology.arc.nasa.gov/roadmap/g1.html |archive-date=17 January 2011 }}</ref> In August 2018, researchers reported that ] could support life.<ref name="EA-2018901">{{cite web |author=Staff |title=Water worlds could support life, study says – Analysis by UChicago, Penn State scientists challenges idea that life requires 'Earth clone' |url=https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-08/uoc-wwc083018.php |date=1 September 2018 |work=] |access-date=1 September 2018 }}</ref><ref name="APJ-20180831">{{cite journal |last1=Kite |first1=Edwin S. |last2=Ford |first2=Eric B. |title=Habitability of Exoplanet Waterworlds |date=31 August 2018 |journal=] |volume=864 |issue=1 |pages=75 |doi=10.3847/1538-4357/aad6e0 |arxiv=1801.00748 |bibcode=2018ApJ...864...75K |s2cid=46991835 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
==Suitable star systems==
An understanding of planetary habitability begins with ]s. While bodies that are generally Earth-like may be plentiful, it is just as important that their larger system be agreeable to life. Under the auspices of ]'s ], scientists ] and ] developed the "]" (or Catalogue of Habitable Stellar Systems) in 2002. The catalogue was formed by winnowing the nearly 120,000 stars of the larger ] into a core group of 17,000 "HabStars," and the selection criteria that were used provide a good starting point for understanding which astrophysical factors are necessary to habitable planets&nbsp;{{mn|HabCat|1}}.


Habitability indicators and ]s must be interpreted within a planetary and environmental context.<ref name='NASA strategy 2015'/> In determining the habitability potential of a body, studies focus on its bulk composition, ]al properties, ], and potential chemical interactions. Stellar characteristics of importance include ] and ], stable ], and high ]. Rocky, wet ]-type planets and moons with the potential for ] are a primary focus of astrobiological research, although more speculative habitability theories occasionally examine ] and other ].
===Spectral class===
The spectral class of a star indicates its ], which (for ]) correlates to overall mass. The appropriate spectral range for "HabStars" is presently considered to be "early F" or "G", to "mid-K". This corresponds to temperatures of a little more than 7,000 ] down to a little more than 4,000 K; the Sun (not coincidentally) is directly in the middle of these bounds, classified as a G2 star. "Middle-class" stars of this sort have a number of characteristics considered important to planetary habitability:


==Background==
*They live at least a few billion years, allowing life a chance to evolve. More ] main-sequence stars of the "O," "B," and "A" classes usually live less than a billion years and in exceptional cases less than 10 million&nbsp;{{mn|StarTables|2}}&nbsp;{{fn|2}}.
*They emit enough high-frequency ] to trigger important atmospheric dynamics such as ] formation, but not so much that ] destroys incipient life&nbsp;{{mn|UVradiation|3}}.
*Liquid water may exist on the surface of planets orbiting them at a distance that does not induce ] (see next section and 3.1).


The idea that planets beyond Earth might host life is an ancient one, though historically it was framed by ] as much as ].<ref group=lower-alpha>This article is an analysis of planetary habitability from the perspective of contemporary physical science. A historical viewpoint on the possibility of habitable planets can be found at ] and ]. For a discussion of the probability of alien life see the ] and ]. Habitable planets are also a staple of fiction; see ].</ref> The late 20th century saw two breakthroughs in the field. The observation and ] ] of other planets and moons within the Solar System has provided critical information on defining habitability criteria and allowed for substantial geophysical comparisons between the Earth and other bodies. The discovery of ]s, beginning in the early 1990s<ref>
These stars are neither "too hot" nor "too cold" and live long enough that life has a chance to begin. This spectral range likely accounts for between 5 and 10 percent of stars in the local Milky Way galaxy<!--http://anzwers.org/free/universe/startype.html-->. Whether fainter late K and M class ("]") stars are also suitable hosts for habitable planets is perhaps the most important open question in the entire field of planetary habitability given that the majority of stars fall within this range; this is discussed extensively below.
{{cite journal |last1=Wolszczan |first1=A. |last2=Frail |first2=D. A. |title=A planetary system around the millisecond pulsar PSR1257 + 12 |journal=Nature |volume=355 |issue=6356 |pages=145–147 |date=9 January 1992 |doi=10.1038/355145a0 |bibcode=1992Natur.355..145W |s2cid=4260368 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Wolszczan |first=A |title=Confirmation of Earth Mass Planets Orbiting the Millisecond Pulsar PSR:B1257+12 |journal=Science |volume=264 |issue=5158 |pages=538–42 |date= 1994 |bibcode=1994Sci...264..538W |doi=10.1126/science.264.5158.538 |jstor=2883699 |pmid=17732735 |s2cid=19621191 }}</ref> and accelerating thereafter, has provided further information for the study of possible extraterrestrial life. These findings confirm that the Sun is not unique among ]s in hosting planets and expands the habitability research horizon beyond the Solar System.


While Earth is the only place in the Universe known to harbor life,<ref name="NASA-1990">{{Cite journal |last=Graham |first=Robert W. |title=NASA Technical Memorandum 102363 – Extraterrestrial Life in the Universe |url= https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19900013148_1990013148.pdf |journal=] |place=Lewis Research Center, Ohio |date=February 1990 |access-date=7 July 2014 }}</ref><ref name="Astrobiology-2008">{{cite book |last=Altermann |first=Wladyslaw |editor=Seckbach, Joseph |editor2=Walsh, Maud |title=From Fossils to Astrobiology: Records of Life on Earth and the Search for Extraterrestrial Biosignatures |chapter=From Fossils to Astrobiology – A Roadmap to Fata Morgana? |date=2008 |volume=12 |isbn=978-1-4020-8836-0 |page=xvii |publisher=Springer }}</ref> estimates of ]s around other stars,<ref>{{cite book|last=Horneck|first=Gerda|author2=Petra Rettberg|date=2007|title=Complete Course in Astrobiology|publisher=Wiley-VCH|isbn=978-3-527-40660-9}}</ref><ref name="NYT-20131118">{{cite news |last=Davies |author-link=Paul Davies |first=Paul |title=Are We Alone in the Universe? |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/19/opinion/are-we-alone-in-the-universe.html |date=18 November 2013 |work=] |access-date=20 November 2013 }}</ref> along with the discovery of thousands of ]s and new insights into the extreme habitats on Earth where organisms known as ]s live, suggest that there may be many more habitable places in the Universe than considered possible until very recently.<ref name="NYT-20150106-DB">{{cite news |last=Overbye |first=Dennis |author-link=Dennis Overbye |title=As Ranks of Goldilocks Planets Grow, Astronomers Consider What's Next |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/07/science/space/as-ranks-of-goldilocks-planets-grow-astronomers-consider-whats-next.html |date=6 January 2015 |work=] |access-date=6 January 2015 }}</ref> On 4 November 2013, astronomers reported, based on ] data, that there could be as many as 40 billion ] ] orbiting in the ]s of ] and ]s within the ].<ref name="NYT-20131104">{{cite news |last=Overbye |first=Dennis|title=Far-Off Planets Like the Earth Dot the Galaxy|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/05/science/cosmic-census-finds-billions-of-planets-that-could-be-like-earth.html |date=4 November 2013 |work=] |access-date=5 November 2013 }}</ref><ref name="PNAS-20131031">{{cite journal |last1=Petigura |first1=Eric A.|last2=Howard |first2=Andrew W. |last3=Marcy |first3=Geoffrey W. |title=Prevalence of Earth-size planets orbiting Sun-like stars|date=31 October 2013 |journal=]|doi=10.1073/pnas.1319909110 |arxiv = 1311.6806 |bibcode = 2013PNAS..11019273P |pmc=3845182 |pmid=24191033 |volume=110 |issue=48|pages=19273–19278|doi-access=free}}</ref> 11 billion of these estimated planets may be orbiting Sun-like stars.<ref name="LATimes-20131104">{{cite news |last=Khan |first=Amina |title=Milky Way may host billions of Earth-size planets |url=http://www.latimes.com/science/la-sci-earth-like-planets-20131105,0,2673237.story |date=4 November 2013 |work=] |access-date=5 November 2013 }}</ref> The nearest such planet may be 12 ]s away, according to the scientists.<ref name="NYT-20131104" /><ref name="PNAS-20131031"/> As of June 2021, a total of 59 potentially habitable exoplanets have been found.<ref name="phl.upr.edu">{{Cite web|url=http://phl.upr.edu/projects/habitable-exoplanets-catalog|title=The Habitable Exoplanets Catalog – Planetary Habitability Laboratory @ UPR Arecibo|website=phl.upr.edu|access-date=2021-08-19}}</ref>
]s with stars of different mass (our solar system in middle).]]


== Stellar characteristics ==
===A stable habitable zone===
An understanding of planetary habitability begins with the ].<ref name="Review 2009">{{cite journal|title=What makes a planet habitable? |journal=The Astronomy and Astrophysics Review |year=2009 |last1=Lammer |first1=H. |last2=Bredehöft |first2=J. H. |last3=Coustenis |first3=A. |last4=Khodachenko |first4=M. L. |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=181–249 |doi=10.1007/s00159-009-0019-z |url=http://veilnebula.jorgejohnson.me/uploads/3/5/8/7/3587678/lammer_et_al_2009_astron_astro_rev-4.pdf |access-date=2016-05-03 |bibcode=2009A&ARv..17..181L |s2cid=123220355 |display-authors=etal |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160602235333/http://veilnebula.jorgejohnson.me/uploads/3/5/8/7/3587678/lammer_et_al_2009_astron_astro_rev-4.pdf |archive-date=2 June 2016 }}</ref> The classical habitable zone (HZ) is defined for surface conditions only; but a metabolism that does not depend on the stellar light can still exist outside the HZ, thriving in the interior of the planet where liquid water is available.<ref name="Review 2009"/>
{{main|Habitable zone}}
The habitable zone (HZ) is a theoretical shell surrounding a star in which any planets present would have liquid ] on their surfaces. After an energy source, liquid water is considered the most important ingredient for life, considering how integral it is to all life-systems on Earth. This may reflect the bias of a water-dependent species, and if life is discovered in the absence of water (for example, in a liquid-] solution), the notion of an HZ may have to be greatly expanded or else discarded altogether as too restricting&nbsp;{{fn|3}}.


Under the auspices of ]'s ], scientists ] and ] developed the "]" (or Catalogue of Habitable Stellar Systems) in 2002. The catalogue was formed by winnowing the nearly 120,000 stars of the larger ] into a core group of 17,000 potentially habitable stars, and the selection criteria that were used provide a good starting point for understanding which astrophysical factors are necessary for habitable planets.<ref name="ajs.145">{{cite journal|last1=Turnbull |first1=Margaret C. |first2=Jill C. |last2=Tarter |title=Target selection for SETI: A catalog of nearby habitable stellar systems |journal=The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series |volume=145 |issue=1 |pages=181–198 |date=March 2003 |url=http://skye.as.arizona.edu/~turnbull/HabCat.pdf |arxiv=astro-ph/0210675 |bibcode=2003ApJS..145..181T |doi=10.1086/345779 |s2cid=14734094 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060222123523/http://skye.as.arizona.edu/~turnbull/HabCat.pdf |archive-date=22 February 2006 }} Habitability criteria defined—the foundational source for this article.</ref> According to research published in August 2015, very large galaxies may be more favorable to the formation and development of habitable planets than smaller galaxies, like the ] galaxy.<ref name="SP-20150821">{{cite web |last=Choi |first=Charles Q. |title=Giant Galaxies May Be Better Cradles for Habitable Planets |url=http://www.space.com/30335-giant-galaxies-habitable-planets.html |date=21 August 2015 |work=] |access-date=24 August 2015 }}</ref>
A "stable" HZ denotes two factors. First, the range of an HZ should not vary greatly over time. All stars increase in luminosity as they age and a given HZ naturally migrates outwards, but if this happens too quickly (for example, with a super-massive star), planets may only have a brief window inside the HZ and a correspondingly weaker chance to develop life. Calculating an HZ range and its long-term movement is never straightforward, given that negative ] such as the ] will tend to offset the increases in luminosity. Assumptions made about atmospheric conditions and geology thus have as great an impact on a putative HZ range as does Solar evolution; the proposed parameters of the Sun's HZ, for example, have fluctuated greatly&nbsp;{{mn|HZs|4}}.


However, what makes a planet habitable is a much more complex question than having a planet located at the right distance from its host star so that water can be liquid on its surface: various ] and ] aspects, the radiation, and the host star's ] environment can influence the evolution of planets and life, if it originated.<ref name="Review 2009"/> Liquid water is a necessary<ref>{{Cite book|last=Giovanni|first=Modirrousta-Galian, Darius Maddalena|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/1247136170|title=Of Aliens and Exoplanets: Why the search for life, probably, requires the search for water|date=2021-04-04|oclc=1247136170}}</ref> but not sufficient condition for life as we know it, as habitability is a function of a multitude of environmental parameters.<ref name='NASA strategy 2015' />
Secondly, no large-mass body such as a gas giant should be present in or relatively close to the HZ, thus disrupting the formation of Earth-like bodies (unless the gas giant itself had a moon large enough to host conditions favorable to life <!--http://www.geosc.psu.edu/~kasting/PersonalPage/Kasting.htm-->). If, for example, ] had appeared in the region that is now between the orbits of ] and Earth, the two smaller planets would almost certainly not have formed. It was once assumed that the inner-rock planets, outer-gas giants pattern observable in the solar system was likely to be the norm elsewhere, but discoveries of ]s have overturned this notion. Numerous Jupiter-sized bodies have been found in close orbit about their primary, disrupting potential HZs. Present data for extrasolar planets is likely to be skewed towards large planets in close eccentric orbits because they are far easier to identify; it remains to be seen which type of solar system is the norm.


===Low stellar variation=== === Spectral class ===
The ] of a star indicates its ], which (for ]) correlates to overall mass. The appropriate spectral range for habitable stars is considered to be "late F" or "G", to "mid-K". This corresponds to temperatures of a little more than 7,000&nbsp;] down to a little less than 4,000&nbsp;K (6,700&nbsp;°C to 3,700&nbsp;°C); the Sun, a G2 star at 5,777&nbsp;K, is well within these bounds. This spectral range probably accounts for between 5% and 10% of stars in the local ]. "Middle-class" stars of this sort have a number of characteristics considered important to planetary habitability:
{{main|Stellar variation}}
* They live at least a few hundred million years, allowing life a chance to evolve. More ] main-sequence stars of the "O" classes and many members of the "B" classes usually live less than 500 million years and in exceptional cases less than 10 million.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.world-builders.org/lessons/less/les1/StarTables.html |title=Star tables |publisher=], Los Angeles |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080614211818/http://www.world-builders.org/lessons/less/les1/StarTables.html |archive-date=14 June 2008 |url-status=live |access-date=12 August 2010 }}</ref><ref group="lower-alpha">Life appears to ] on Earth approximately 500 million years after the planet's formation. "A" class stars (which shine for between 600 million and 1.2 billion years) and the very latest of the "B" class stars (which shine 10+ million to 600 million) fall within this window. At least theoretically life could emerge in such systems but it would almost certainly not reach a sophisticated level given these time-frames and the fact that increases in luminosity would occur quite rapidly. Life around "O" class stars is exceptionally unlikely, as they shine for less than ten million years.</ref>
* They emit enough high-frequency ] to trigger important atmospheric dynamics such as ] formation, but not so much that ] destroys incipient life.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kasting |first1=James F. |author-link=James Kasting |last2=Whittet |first2=DC |last3=Sheldon |first3=WR |date=August 1997 |title=Ultraviolet radiation from F and K stars and implications for planetary habitability |journal=Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres |volume=27 |issue=4 |pages=413–420 |bibcode=1997OLEB...27..413K |doi=10.1023/A:1006596806012 |pmid=11536831 |s2cid=9685420 }}</ref>
* They emit sufficient radiation at wavelengths conducive to photosynthesis.<ref>{{cite web|title=Light Absorption for Photosynthesis|url=http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Biology/ligabs.html|website=phy-astr.gus.edu|publisher=Georgia State University|access-date=2018-05-01|format=Graphic with references|quote=It is evident from these absorption and output plots that only the red and blue ends of the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum are used by plants in photosynthesis. The reflection and transmission of the middle of the spectrum gives the leaves their green visual color.}}</ref>
* Liquid water may exist on the surface of planets orbiting them at a distance that does not induce ].


] may be able to support life far longer than the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.iau.org/public_press/news/detail/iau0916/ |title=The violent youth of solar proxies steer course of genesis of life |last1=Guinan |first1=Edward |first2=Manfred |last2=Cuntz |date=10 August 2009 |publisher=International Astronomical Union |access-date=27 August 2009 }}</ref>
Changes in ] are common to all stars, but the severity of such fluctuations covers a broad range. Most stars are relatively stable, but a significant minority of variable stars often experience sudden and intense increases in luminosity and consequently the amount of energy radiated toward bodies in orbit. These are considered poor candidates for hosting life-bearing planets as their unpredictability and energy output changes would negatively impact organisms. Most obviously, living things adapted to a particular ] range would likely be unable to survive too great a temperature deviation. Further, upswings in luminosity are generally accompanied by massive doses of ] and ] radiation which might prove lethal. ] do mitigate such effects (an absolute increase of 100 percent in the Sun's luminosity would not necessarily mean a 100 percent absolute temperature increase on Earth), but atmosphere retention might not occur on planets orbiting variables, because the high-frequency energy buffetting these bodies would continually strip them of their protective covering.


Whether fainter late K and M class ] stars are also suitable hosts for habitable planets is perhaps the most important open question in the entire field of planetary habitability given their prevalence (]). ], a "]", has been found orbiting in the "]" (HZ) of a ] and may possess liquid water. However it is also possible that a greenhouse effect may render it too hot to support life, while its neighbor, ], may be a more likely candidate for habitability.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Gliese 581: one planet might indeed be habitable |publisher=Astronomy & Astrophysics |date=13 December 2007 |url=http://www.aanda.org/content/view/275/42/lang,en/ |access-date=7 April 2008 }}</ref> In September 2010, the discovery was announced of another planet, ], in an orbit between these two planets. However, reviews of the discovery have placed the existence of this planet in doubt, and it is listed as "unconfirmed". In September 2012, the discovery of two planets orbiting ]<ref name="Simbad-20120920">{{cite web |author=Staff |title=LHS 188 – High proper-motion Star |url=http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-id?Ident=HIP+19394 |date=20 September 2012 |publisher=] (Strasbourg astronomical Data Center) |access-date=20 September 2012 }}</ref> was announced.<ref name="PHL-20120829">{{cite web |last=Méndez |first=Abel |title=A Hot Potential Habitable Exoplanet around Gliese 163 |url=http://phl.upr.edu/press-releases/ahotpotentialhabitableexoplanetaroundgliese163 |date=29 August 2012 |publisher=] (Planetary Habitability Laboratory) |access-date=20 September 2012 |archive-date=21 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191021202448/http://phl.upr.edu/press-releases/ahotpotentialhabitableexoplanetaroundgliese163 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="Space-20120920">{{cite web |last=Redd |first=Nola Taylor |title=Newfound Alien Planet a Top Contender to Host Life |url=http://www.space.com/17684-alien-planet-gliese-163c-extraterrestrial-life.html |date=20 September 2012 |publisher=] |access-date=20 September 2012 }}</ref> One of the planets, ], about 6.9 times the mass of Earth and somewhat hotter, was considered to be within the habitable zone.<ref name="PHL-20120829" /><ref name="Space-20120920" />
The Sun, as in much else, is benign in terms of this danger: the variation between solar max and minimum is roughly 0.1 percent over its 11-year ]. There is strong (though not undisputed) ] that even minor changes in the Sun's luminosity have had significant effects on the Earth's climate well within the historical era; the ] of the mid-second millennium, for instance, may have been caused by a relatively long-term decline in the sun's luminosity&nbsp;{{mn|Iceage|5}}. Thus, a star does not have to be a true variable for differences in luminosity to affect habitability. Of known "]s," the one that most closely resembles the Sun is considered to be ]; interestingly (and unfortunately for the prospects of life existing in its proximity), the only significant difference between the two bodies is the amplitude of the solar cycle, which appears to be much greater on 18 Scorpii <!--What's the best estimate for how much?--> {{mn|Scorpii|6}}.


A recent study suggests that cooler stars that emit more light in the infrared and near infrared may actually host warmer planets with less ice and incidence of snowball states. These wavelengths are absorbed by their planets' ice and greenhouse gases and remain warmer.<ref name="red.1112902301">{{cite web |url=http://www.redorbit.com/news/space/1112902301/cooler-stars-host-warmer-planets-071913 |title=Planets May Keep Warmer in a Cool Star System |publisher=Redorbit |date=19 July 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1089/ast.2012.0961| pmid = 23855332| title = The Effect of Host Star Spectral Energy Distribution and Ice-Albedo Feedback on the Climate of Extrasolar Planets| journal = Astrobiology| volume = 13| issue = 8| pages = 715–39| year = 2013| last1 = Shields | first1 = A. L. | last2 = Meadows | first2 = V. S. | last3 = Bitz | first3 = C. M. |author-link3=Cecilia Bitz| last4 = Pierrehumbert | first4 = R. T. | last5 = Joshi | first5 = M. M. | last6 = Robinson | first6 = T. D. | bibcode = 2013AsBio..13..715S|arxiv = 1305.6926 | pmc=3746291}}</ref>
===High metallicity===
{{main|Metallicity}}


A 2020 study found that about half of Sun-like stars could host rocky, potentially habitable planets. Specifically, they estimated with that, on average, the nearest habitable zone planet around G and K-type stars is about 6 parsecs away, and there are about 4 rocky planets around G and K-type stars within 10 parsecs (32.6 light years) of the Sun.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Center|first=By Frank Tavares NASA's Ames Research|title=About Half of Sun-Like Stars Could Host Rocky, Potentially Habitable Planets|url=https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/news/1664/about-half-of-sun-like-stars-could-host-rocky-potentially-habitable-planets/|access-date=2020-12-14|website=Exoplanet Exploration: Planets Beyond our Solar System}}</ref>
While the bulk of material in any star is ] and ], there is a great variation in the amount of heavier elements (]) stars contain. A high proportion of metals in a star correlates to the amount of heavy material initially available in ]s. A low amount of metal significantly decreases the probability that planets will have formed around that star, under the ] theory of ]s formation. Any planets that did form around a metal-poor star would likely be low in mass, and thus unfavorable for life. ] studies of systems where ]s have been found to date confirm the relationship between high metal content and planet formation: "stars with planets, or at least with planets similar to the ones we are finding today, are clearly more metal rich than stars without planetary companions {{mn|metals|7}}." High metallicity also places a requirement for youth on hab-stars: stars formed early in the ]'s history have low metal content and a correspondingly lesser likelihood of having planetary companions.


=== Stable habitable zone ===
== Planetary characteristics ==
{{Main|Habitable zone}}
The chief assumption about habitable planets is that they are ]. Such planets, roughly within one order of magnitude of Earth mass, are primarily composed of ] rocks and have not accreted the gaseous outer layers of ] and ] found on ]. That life could evolve in the cloud tops of giant planets has not been decisively ruled out&nbsp;{{fn|4}}, though it is considered unlikely given that they have no surface and their gravity is enormous&nbsp;{{mn|GiantSats|8}}. The natural satellites of giant planets, meanwhile, remain perfectly valid candidates for hosting life&nbsp;{{mn|SatelliteLife|9}}.


The habitable zone (HZ) is a ]-shaped region of space surrounding a star in which a planet could maintain liquid water on its surface.<ref name="Review 2009"/> The concept was first proposed by astrophysicist ] in 1959, based on climatic constraints imposed by the host star.<ref name="Review 2009"/> After an energy source, liquid water is widely considered the most important ingredient for life, considering how integral it is to all life systems on Earth. However, if life is discovered in the absence of water, the definition of an HZ may have to be greatly expanded. <!-- What follows is not a reference but an editorial comment. <ref group=lower-alpha>That ] and to a lesser extent ] (respectively 3.5 and 8 ]s outside the Sun's putative habitable zone) are considered prime candidates underscores the problematic nature of the HZ criterion. In secondary and tertiary descriptions{{clarify|date=June 2013}} of habitability it is often stated that habitable planets ''must'' be within the HZ—this remains to be proven.</ref> -->
In analyzing which environments are likely to support life a distinction is usually made between simple, unicellular organisms such as ] and ] and complex metazoans (animals). Unicellularity necessarily precedes multicellularity in any hypothetical tree of life and where single-celled organisms do emerge there is no assurance that this will lead to greater complexity&nbsp;{{fn|6}}. The planetary characteristics listed below are considered crucial for life generally, but in every case habitability impediments should be considered greater for multicellular organisms such as plants and animals versus unicellular life.


The inner edge of the HZ is the distance where ] vaporize the whole water reservoir and, as a second effect, induce the photodissociation of water vapor and the loss of hydrogen to space. The outer edge of the HZ is the distance from the star where a maximum greenhouse effect fails to keep the surface of the planet above the freezing point, and by {{chem|CO|2}}(carbon dioxide) condensation.<ref name="Review 2009"/><ref name="Seager 2013"/>
], with its thin atmosphere, is colder than Earth would be at a similar distance from the Sun.]]


A "stable" HZ implies two factors. First, the range of an HZ should not vary greatly over time. All stars increase in luminosity as they age, and a given HZ thus migrates outwards, but if this happens too quickly (for example, with a super-massive star) planets may only have a brief window inside the HZ and a correspondingly smaller chance of developing life. Calculating an HZ range and its long-term movement is never straightforward, as negative ] such as the ] will tend to offset the increases in luminosity. Assumptions made about atmospheric conditions and geology thus have as great an impact on a putative HZ range as does stellar evolution: the proposed parameters of the Sun's HZ, for example, have fluctuated greatly.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Kasting |first1=James F. |author-link=James Kasting |last2=Whitmore |first2=Daniel P. |last3=Reynolds |first3=Ray T. |date=1993 |title=Habitable Zones Around Main Sequence Stars |journal=Icarus |issue=1 |pages=108–128 |url=http://www.geosc.psu.edu/~kasting/PersonalPage/Pdf/Icarus_93.pdf |doi=10.1006/icar.1993.1010 |volume=101 |bibcode=1993Icar..101..108K |pmid=11536936 |access-date=6 August 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090318115319/http://www.geosc.psu.edu/~kasting/PersonalPage/Pdf/Icarus_93.pdf |archive-date=18 March 2009 }}</ref>
===Mass===
Low-mass planets are poor candidates for life for two reasons. First, their lesser ] makes ] retention difficult. Constituent ]s are more likely to reach ] and be lost to space when buffeted by ] or stirred by collision. Planets without a thick atmosphere lack the matter necessary for primal ], have little insulation and poor ] across their surfaces (for example, ] with its thin atmosphere is colder than the Earth would be at similar distance) and lesser protection against high-frequency ] and ]s. Further, where an atmosphere is less than 0.006 Earth atmospheres water cannot exist in liquid form as the required ], 4.56 ] (608 Pa), does not occur <!--http://zebu.uoregon.edu/~soper/Mars/water.html-->. The temperature range at which water is liquid is smaller at low pressures generally.


Second, no large-mass body such as a ] should be present in or relatively close to the HZ, thus disrupting the formation of Earth-size bodies. The matter in the asteroid belt, for example, appears to have been unable to accrete into a planet due to orbital resonances with Jupiter; if the giant had appeared in the region that is now between the orbits of ] and ], Earth would almost certainly not have developed in its present form. However a gas giant inside the HZ might have ]s under the right conditions.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Williams |first1=Darren M. |last2=Kasting |first2=James F. |last3=Wade |first3=Richard A. |date=January 1997 |title=Habitable moons around extrasolar giant planets |journal=Nature |doi=10.1038/385234a0 |issue=6613 |pages=234–236 |volume=385 |pmid=9000072 |bibcode=1996DPS....28.1221W |s2cid=4233894 }}</ref>
Secondly, smaller planets have smaller ]s and thus higher surface-to-volume ratios than their larger cousins. Such bodies tend to lose the energy left over from their formation quickly and end up ] dead, lacking the ]es, ]s and ] which supply the surface with life-sustaining material and the atmosphere with temperature moderators like ]. Plate tectonics appear particularly crucial, at least on Earth: not only does the process recycle important chemicals and minerals, it also fosters ] through continent creation and increased environmental complexity and helps create the convective cells necessary to generate Earth's ]&nbsp;{{mn|Tectonics|10}}.


=== Low stellar variation ===
"Low mass" is partly a relative label; the Earth is considered low mass when compared to the Solar System's ]s, but it is the largest, by diameter and mass, and densest of all terrestrial bodies&nbsp;{{fn|5}}. It is large enough to retain an atmosphere through gravity alone and large enough that its molten core remains a heat engine, driving the diverse geology of the surface (the decay of ] elements within a planet's core is the other significant component of planetary heating). Mars, by contrast, is nearly (or perhaps totally) geologically dead and has lost much of its atmosphere&nbsp;{{mn|Core|11}}. Thus, it would be fair to infer that the lower mass limit for habitability lies somewhere between Mars and Earth-Venus. Exceptional circumstances do offer exceptional cases: ]'s moon ] (smaller than the terrestrial planets) is volcanically dynamic because of the gravitational stresses induced by its orbit; neighbouring ] may have a liquid ocean underneath a frozen shell due also to energy created in its orbiting a gas giant; ]'s ], meanwhile, has an outside chance of harbouring life as it has retained a thick atmosphere and bio-chemical reactions are possible in liquid methane on its surface. These satellites are exceptions, but they prove that mass as a habitability criterion cannot be considered definitive.
{{Main|Variable star}}


Changes in ] are common to all stars, but the severity of such fluctuations covers a broad range. Most stars are relatively stable, but a significant minority of variable stars often undergo sudden and intense increases in luminosity and consequently in the amount of energy radiated toward bodies in orbit. These stars are considered poor candidates for hosting life-bearing planets, as their unpredictability and energy output changes would negatively impact ]s: living things adapted to a specific temperature range could not survive too great a temperature variation. Further, upswings in luminosity are generally accompanied by massive doses of ] and ] radiation which might prove lethal. ] do mitigate such effects, but their atmosphere might not be retained by planets orbiting variables, because the high-frequency energy buffeting these planets would continually strip them of their protective covering.
Finally, a larger planet is likely to have a large iron core. This allows for a ] to ] the planet from the ], which otherwise tends to strip away the planetary atmosphere and to bombard living things with ionised particles. Mass is not the only criterion for producing a magnetic field &mdash; as the planet must also rotate fast enough to produce a ] effect within its core&nbsp;{{mn|Magnetic|12}}&mdash; but it is a significant component of the process.


The Sun, in this respect as in many others, is relatively benign: the variation between its maximum and minimum energy output is roughly 0.1% over its 11-year ]. There is strong (though not undisputed) ] that even minor changes in the Sun's luminosity have had significant effects on the Earth's climate well within the historical era: the ] of the mid-second millennium, for instance, may have been caused by a relatively long-term decline in the Sun's luminosity.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.atmos.washington.edu/1998Q4/211/project2/group4.htm |title=The Little Ice Age |work=Department of Atmospheric Science |publisher=] |access-date=11 May 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120209233434/http://www.atmos.washington.edu/1998Q4/211/project2/group4.htm |archive-date=9 February 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Thus, a star does not have to be a true variable for differences in luminosity to affect habitability. Of known ]s, one that closely resembles the Sun is considered to be ]; unfortunately for the prospects of life existing in its proximity, the only significant difference between the two bodies is the amplitude of the solar cycle, which appears to be much greater for 18 Scorpii<!--What's the best estimate for how much?-->.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.solstation.com/stars2/18sco.htm |title=18 Scorpii |work=solstation.com |publisher=Sol Company |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref>
===Orbit and rotation===
As with other criteria, stability is the critical consideration in determining the effect of orbital and rotational characteristics on planetary habitability. ] is the difference between a planet's closest and farthest approach to its primary. The greater the eccentricity the greater the temperature fluctuation on a planet's surface. Although they are adaptive, living organisms can only stand so much variation, particularly if the fluctuations overlap both the ] and ] of the planet's main biotic solvent (e.g., water on Earth). If, for example, Earth's oceans were alternately boiling and freezing solid, it is difficult to imagine life as we know it having evolved. The more complex the organism, the greater the temperature sensitivity&nbsp;{{mn|TempRange|13}}. The Earth's orbit is almost wholly circular, with an eccentricity of less than 0.02; other planets in our solar system (with the exception of ] and ]) have eccentricities that are similarly benign.


=== High metallicity ===
Data collected on the orbital eccentricities of extrasolar planets has surprised most researchers: 90% have an orbital eccentricity greater than that found within the solar system, and the average is fully 0.25&nbsp;{{mn|Exoplanets|14}}. This could very easily be the result of sample bias. Often planets are not observed directly, but rather are inferred based on the "wobble" they cause on their parent star—the greater the eccentricity the greater the perturbance in the star, and thus, the greater the detectability of the planet.
{{See also|Metallicity}}


While the bulk of material in any star is ] and ], there is a significant variation in the amount of heavier elements (]). A high proportion of metals in a star correlates to the amount of heavy material initially available in the ]. A smaller amount of metal makes the formation of planets much less likely, under the ] theory of ] formation. Any planets that did form around a metal-poor star would probably be low in mass, and thus unfavorable for life. ] studies of systems where ]s have been found to date confirm the relationship between high metal content and planet formation: "Stars with planets, or at least with planets similar to the ones we are finding today, are clearly more metal rich than stars without planetary companions."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Santos |first1=Nuno C. |last2=Israelian |first2=Garik |last3=Mayor |first3=Michael |date=2003 |title=Confirming the Metal-Rich Nature of Stars with Giant Planets |work=Proceedings of 12th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and The Sun |publisher=] |url=http://origins.colorado.edu/cs12/proceedings/oral/tuesday/santosxx.pdf |access-date=11 August 2007 |archive-date=15 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120415095118/http://cs12.colorado.edu/proceedings/oral/tuesday/santosxx.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> This relationship between high metallicity and planet formation also means that habitable systems are more likely to be found around stars of younger generations, since stars that formed early in the ]'s history have low metal content.
A planet's movement around its ] must also meet certain criteria if life is to have the opportunity to evolve. A first assumption is that the planet should have moderate seasons. If there is little or no ] (or obliquity) relative to the perpendicular of the ], seasons will not occur and a main stimulant to biospheric dynamism will disappear. The planet would also be much colder than it would be with a significant tilt: when the greatest intensity of radiation is always within a few degrees of the equator, warm weather cannot move poleward and a planet's climate becomes dominated by colder polar weather systems.


== Planetary characteristics ==
If a planet is radically tilted, meanwhile, seasons will be extreme and make it more difficult for a biosphere to achieve ]. Although during the ] higher axial tilt of the Earth coincides with reduced polar ], warmer temperatures and ''less'' seasonal variation, scientists do not know whether this trend would continue indefinitely with further increases in axial tilt (see ]).
]


Habitability indicators and ]s must be interpreted within a planetary and environmental context.<ref name='NASA strategy 2015'/> Whether a planet will emerge as habitable depends on the sequence of events that led to its formation, which could include the production of organic molecules in ]s and ]s, delivery of materials during and after planetary ], and the orbital location in the planetary system.<ref name='NASA strategy 2015'/> The chief assumption about habitable planets is that they are ]. Such planets, roughly within one ] of ], are primarily composed of ] rocks, and have not accreted the gaseous outer layers of ] and ] found on ]s. The possibility that life could evolve in the cloud tops of giant planets has not been decisively ruled out,{{refn |group="lower-alpha" |In '']'', ] and ] evaluate plausible scenarios in which life might form in the cloud-tops of Jovian planets. Similarly, ] suggested that the clouds of ] might host life.<ref name="Sagan, C. 1976" /><ref name="Darling" />}} though it is considered unlikely, as they have no surface and their gravity is enormous.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://motivate.maths.org/conferences/conf58/c58_talk4.shtml |title=Could there be life in the outer solar system? |date=2002 |work=Millennium Mathematics Project, Videoconferences for Schools |publisher=] |access-date=5 August 2007 }}</ref> The natural satellites of giant planets, meanwhile, ].<ref name="moonlife" />
The exact effects of these changes can only be computer modelled at present, and studies have shown that even extreme tilts of up to 85 degrees do not absolutely preclude life "provided does not occupy continental surfaces plagued seasonally by the highest temperature&nbsp;{{mn|Tilt|15}}." Not only the mean axial tilt, but also its variation over time must be considered. The Earth's tilt varies between 21.5 and 24.5 degrees over 41,000 years. A more drastic variation, or a much shorter periodicity, would induce climatic affects such as variations in seasonal severity.


In February 2011 the ] released a ], including 54 that may be in the habitable zone.<ref name=borucki>{{cite journal |date=2011 |title=Characteristics of planetary candidates observed by Kepler, II: Analysis of the first four months of data |journal=] |volume=736 |issue=1 |pages=19 |arxiv=1102.0541 |bibcode= 2011ApJ...736...19B |doi=10.1088/0004-637X/736/1/19|last1=Borucki |first1=William J. |last2=Koch |first2=David G. |last3=Basri |first3=Gibor |last4=Batalha |first4=Natalie |last5=Brown |first5=Timothy M. |last6=Bryson |first6=Stephen T. |last7=Caldwell |first7=Douglas |last8=Christensen-Dalsgaard |first8=Jørgen |last9=Cochran |first9=William D. |last10=Devore |first10=Edna |last11=Dunham |first11=Edward W. |last12=Gautier |first12=Thomas N. |last13=Geary |first13=John C. |last14=Gilliland |first14=Ronald |last15=Gould |first15=Alan |last16=Howell |first16=Steve B. |last17=Jenkins |first17=Jon M. |last18=Latham |first18=David W. |last19=Lissauer |first19=Jack J. |last20=Marcy |first20=Geoffrey W. |last21=Rowe |first21=Jason |last22=Sasselov |first22=Dimitar |last23=Boss |first23=Alan |last24=Charbonneau |first24=David |last25=Ciardi |first25=David |last26=Doyle |first26=Laurance |last27=Dupree |first27=Andrea K. |last28=Ford |first28=Eric B. |last29=Fortney |first29=Jonathan |last30=Holman |first30=Matthew J. |s2cid=15233153 |display-authors=29 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://kepler.nasa.gov/news/nasakeplernews/index.cfm?FuseAction=ShowNews&NewsID=98 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110429012133/http://kepler.nasa.gov/news/nasakeplernews/index.cfm?FuseAction=ShowNews&NewsID=98 |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 April 2011 |title=NASA Finds Earth-size Planet Candidates in Habitable Zone, Six Planet System |date=2 February 2011 |publisher=] |access-date=2 February 2011 }}</ref> Six of the candidates in this zone are smaller than twice the size of Earth.<ref name=borucki/> A more recent study found that one of these candidates (KOI 326.01) is much larger and hotter than first reported.<ref name=Grant>{{cite web |last=Grant |first=Andrew |title=Exclusive: "Most Earth-Like" Exoplanet Gets Major Demotion—It Isn't Habitable |url=http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2011/03/08/exclusive-most-earth-like-exoplanet-gets-major-demotion-it-isnt-habitable/ |publisher=] |date=8 March 2011 |access-date=9 March 2011 |archive-date=15 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140315043746/http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2011/03/08/exclusive-most-earth-like-exoplanet-gets-major-demotion-it-isnt-habitable/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Based on the findings, the Kepler team estimated there to be "at least 50 billion planets in the Milky Way" of which "at least 500 million" are in the habitable zone.<ref name="BorensteinS">{{cite news |first=Seth |last=Borenstein |title=Cosmic census finds crowd of planets in our galaxy |agency=Associated Press |date=19 February 2011 |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna41686017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240115031655/https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna41686017 |url-status=dead |archive-date=15 January 2024 |access-date=14 January 2024}}</ref>
Other orbital considerations include:


In analyzing which environments are likely to support life, a distinction is usually made between simple, unicellular organisms such as ] and ] and complex metazoans (animals). Unicellularity necessarily precedes multicellularity in any hypothetical tree of life, and where single-celled organisms do emerge there is no assurance that greater complexity will then develop.<ref group=lower-alpha>There is an emerging consensus that single-celled micro-organisms may in fact be common in the universe, especially since Earth's ]s flourish in environments that were once considered hostile to life. The potential occurrence of complex multi-celled life remains much more controversial. In their work '']'', ] and ] argue that microbial life is probably widespread while complex life is very rare and perhaps even unique to Earth. Current knowledge of Earth's history partly buttresses this theory: multi-celled organisms are believed to have emerged at the time of the ] close to 600 million years ago, but more than 3 billion years after life first appeared. That Earth life remained unicellular for so long underscores that the decisive step toward complex organisms need not necessarily occur.</ref> The planetary characteristics listed below are considered crucial for life generally, but in every case multicellular organisms are more picky than unicellular life.
*The planet should rotate relatively quickly so that the day-night cycle is not overlong. If a day takes years, the temperature differential between the day and night side will be pronounced, and problems similar to those noted with extreme orbital eccentricity will come to the fore.
*Change in the direction of the axis rotation (]) should not be pron ounced. In itself, precession need not affect habitability as it changes the direction of the tilt, not its degree. However, precession tends to accentuate variations caused by other orbital deviations; see ]. Precession on Earth occurs over a 23 000 year cycle.


In August 2021, a new class of habitable planets, named ]s, which involves "hot, ocean-covered planets with hydrogen-rich atmospheres", has been reported.<ref name=<"PHY-20210825">{{cite web |author=]|title=New class of habitable exoplanets represent a big step forward in the search for life |url=https://phys.org/news/2021-08-class-habitable-exoplanets-big-life.html |date=25 August 2021 |work=] |access-date=25 August 2021 }}</ref> ]s may soon be studied for ]s by ] as well as ]s, such as the ] (JWST), which was launched on 25 December 2021.<ref name="BBC-20210827">{{cite news |author=Staff |title=Alien life could be living on big 'Hycean' exoplanets |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/58308604 |date=27 August 2021 |publisher=] |access-date=27 August 2021 }}</ref>
The Earth's moon appears to play a ] in moderating the Earth's climate by stabilising the axial tilt. It has been suggested that a chaotic tilt may be a "deal-breaker" in terms of habitability&mdash; i.e. a satellite the size of the moon is not only helpful but required to produce stability&nbsp;{{mn|Obliquity|16}}. This position remains controversial&nbsp;{{fn|7}}.


===Geochemistry=== === Mass and size ===
], with its ] atmosphere, is colder than the Earth would be if it were at a similar distance from the Sun.]]
It is generally assumed that any extraterrestrial life that might exist will be based on the same fundamental chemistry as found on Earth, as the four elements most vital for life, ], ], ], and ], are also the most common chemically reactive elements in the universe. Indeed, simple biogenic compounds, such as ]s, have been found in ]s and in ]. These four elements by mass make up over 96 percent of Earth's collective ]. Carbon has an unparalleled ability to bond with itself and to form a massive array of intricate and varied structures, making it an ideal material for the complex mechanisms that form living cells. Hydrogen and oxygen, in the form of water, compose the solvent in which biological processes take place and in which the first reactions occurred that led to life's emergence. The energy released in the formation of powerful ]s between carbon and oxygen, available by oxidizing organic compounds, is the fuel of all complex lifeforms. These four elements together make up amino acids, which in turn are the building blocks of ]s, the substance of living tissue.
Low-mass planets are poor candidates for life for two reasons. First, their lesser ] makes ] retention difficult. Constituent ]s are more likely to reach ] and be lost to space when buffeted by ] or stirred by collision. Planets without a thick atmosphere lack the matter necessary for primal ], have little insulation and poor ] across their surfaces (for example, ], with its thin atmosphere, is colder than the Earth would be if it were at a similar distance from the Sun), and provide less protection against ]s and high-frequency ]. Further, where an atmosphere is less dense than 0.006 Earth atmospheres, water cannot exist in liquid form as the required ], 4.56 ] (608 Pa) (0.18 ]), does not occur.<!--http://zebu.uoregon.edu/~soper/Mars/water.html--> In addition, a lessened pressure reduces the range of temperatures at which water is liquid.


Secondly, smaller planets have smaller ]s and thus higher surface-to-volume ratios than their larger cousins. Such bodies tend to lose the energy left over from their formation quickly and end up ] dead, lacking the ]es, ]s and ] which supply the surface with life-sustaining material and the atmosphere with temperature moderators like ]. Plate tectonics appear particularly crucial, at least on Earth: not only does the process recycle important chemicals and minerals, it also fosters ] through continent creation and increased environmental complexity and helps create the convective cells necessary to generate ].<ref>], pp. 191–220</ref> Although geologically active planets with volcanism but no plate tectonics, called Ignan Earths, could also be habitable.<ref></ref>
Relative abundance in space does not always mirror differentiated abundance within planets; of the four life elements, for instance, only oxygen is present in any abundance in the Earth's ]&nbsp;{{mn|Elements|17}}. This can be partly explained by the fact that many of these elements, such as ] and ], along with their most basic compounds, such as ], ], ], ], and ], are gaseous at warm temperatures. In the hot region close to the Sun, these volatile compounds could not have played a significant role in the planets' geological formation. Instead, they were trapped as gases underneath the newly formed crusts, which were largely made of rocky, involatile compounds such as ] (a compound of ] and oxygen, accounting for oxygen's relative abundance). ] of volatile compounds through the first volcanoes would have contributed to the formation of the planets' ]. The ] showed that, with the application of energy, ]s can form from the synthesis of the simple compounds within a primordial atmosphere&nbsp;{{mn|Oceans|18}}.


"Low mass" is partly a relative label: the Earth is low mass when compared to the Solar System's ]s, but it is the largest, by diameter and mass, and the densest of all terrestrial bodies.<ref group=lower-alpha>There is a "mass-gap" in the Solar System between Earth and the two smallest gas giants, ] and ], which are 13 and 17 Earth masses. This is probably just chance, as there is no geophysical barrier to the formation of intermediate bodies (see for instance ] and ]) and we should expect to find planets throughout the galaxy between two and twelve Earth masses. If the star system is otherwise favorable, such planets would be good candidates for life as they would be large enough to remain internally dynamic and to retain an atmosphere for billions of years but not so large as to accrete a gaseous shell which limits the possibility of life formation.</ref> It is large enough to retain an atmosphere through gravity alone and large enough that its molten core remains a heat engine, driving the diverse geology of the surface (the decay of ] elements within a planet's core is the other significant component of planetary heating). Mars, by contrast, is nearly (or perhaps totally) geologically dead and has lost much of its atmosphere.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://csmres.jmu.edu/geollab/Fichter/PlateTect/heathistory.html |title=The Heat History of the Earth |work=Geolab |publisher=] |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref> Thus it would be fair to infer that the lower mass limit for habitability lies somewhere between that of Mars and that of Earth or Venus: 0.3 Earth masses has been offered as a rough dividing line for habitable planets.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Raymond |first1=Sean N. |last2=Quinn |first2=Thomas |last3=Lunine |first3=Jonathan I. |date=January 2007 |title=High-resolution simulations of the final assembly of Earth-like planets 2: water delivery and planetary habitability |journal=Astrobiology |arxiv=astro-ph/0510285 |doi=10.1089/ast.2006.06-0126 |volume=7 |pages=66–84 |pmid=17407404 |bibcode=2007AsBio...7...66R |issue=1 |s2cid=10257401 |url=https://cds.cern.ch/record/895337 |type=Submitted manuscript }}</ref> However, a 2008 study by the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics suggests that the dividing line may be higher. Earth may in fact lie on the lower boundary of habitability: if it were any smaller, plate tectonics would be impossible. Venus, which has 85% of Earth's mass, shows no signs of tectonic activity. Conversely, "]s", terrestrial planets with higher masses than Earth, would have higher levels of plate tectonics and thus be firmly placed in the habitable range.<ref>{{cite web |title=Earth: A Borderline Planet for Life? |work=Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics |date=2008 |url=http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/press/2008/pr200802.html |access-date=4 June 2008 }}</ref>
Even so, volcanic outgassing could not have accounted for the amount of water in Earth's oceans&nbsp;{{mn|Water|19}}. The vast majority of the water, and arguably of the carbon, necessary for life must have come from the outer solar system, away from the Sun's heat, where it could remain solid. ]s impacting with the Earth in the Solar system's early years would have deposited vast amounts of water, along with the other volatile compounds life requires (including amino acids) onto the early Earth, providing a kick-start to the evolution of life.


Exceptional circumstances do offer exceptional cases: ]'s moon ] (which is smaller than any of the terrestrial planets) is volcanically dynamic because of the gravitational stresses induced by its orbit, and its neighbor ] may have a liquid ocean or icy slush underneath a frozen shell also due to power generated from orbiting a gas giant.
Thus, while there is reason to suspect that the four "life elements" ought be readily available elsewhere, a habitable system likely also requires a supply of long-term orbiting bodies to seed inner planets. Without comets there is a possibility that life as we know it would not exist on Earth. The possibility also remains that other elements beyond those necessary on Earth will provide a biochemical basis for life elsewhere; see ].


]'s ], meanwhile, has an outside chance of harbouring life, as it has retained a thick atmosphere and has liquid ] seas on its surface. Organic-chemical reactions that only require minimum energy are possible in these seas, but whether any living system can be based on such minimal reactions is unclear, and would seem unlikely.<ref>{{Cite web |last= |first= |date=2024-02-20 |title=Titan Most Likely Non-Habitable, Astrobiologists Say {{!}} Sci.News |url=https://www.sci.news/space/non-habitable-titan-12703.html |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Sci.News: Breaking Science News |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Neish |first1=Catherine |last2=Malaska |first2=Michael J. |last3=Sotin |first3=Christophe |last4=Lopes |first4=Rosaly M.C. |author4-link=Rosaly Lopes |last5=Nixon |first5=Conor A. |last6=Affholder |first6=Antonin |last7=Chatain |first7=Audrey |last8=Cockell |first8=Charles |last9=Farnsworth |first9=Kendra K. |last10=Higgins |first10=Peter M. |last11=Miller |first11=Kelly E. |last12=Soderlund |first12=Krista M. |date=2024-02-01 |title=Organic Input to Titan's Subsurface Ocean Through Impact Cratering |url=https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/ast.2023.0055 |journal=Astrobiology |language=en |volume=24 |issue=2 |pages=177–189 |doi=10.1089/ast.2023.0055 |pmid=38306187 |bibcode=2024AsBio..24..177N |issn=1531-1074}}</ref> These satellites are exceptions, but they prove that mass, as a criterion for habitability, cannot necessarily be considered definitive at this stage of our understanding.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15863549 |title=Most liveable alien worlds ranked|access-date=2017-08-16 |date=23 November 2011 |department=Science & Environment|publisher=BBC News}}</ref>
==Alternative star systems==
In determining the feasibility of extraterrestrial life, astronomers had long focused their attention on stars like our own Sun. However, they have begun to explore the possibility that life might form in systems very unlike our own.


A larger planet is likely to have a more massive atmosphere. A combination of higher escape velocity to retain lighter atoms, and extensive outgassing from enhanced plate tectonics may greatly increase the atmospheric pressure and temperature at the surface compared to Earth. The enhanced greenhouse effect of such a heavy atmosphere would tend to suggest that the habitable zone should be further out from the central star for such massive planets.
===Binary systems===
Typical estimates often suggest that 50% or more of all stars are in a ]. This may be partly sample bias, as massive and bright stars tend to be in binaries and these are most easily observed and catalogued; a more precise analysis has suggested that more common, fainter, stars are usually singular and that up to two thirds of all stellar systems are therefore solitary&nbsp;{{mn|PcgtBinary|20}}.
The separation between stars in a binary may range from less than one ] (AU, the Earth-Sun distance) to several hundred. In latter instances, the gravitational effects will be negligible on a planet orbiting an otherwise suitable star and habitability potential will not be disrupted unless the orbit is highly eccentric (see ], for example). However, where the separation is significantly less, a stable orbit may be impossible. If a planet’s distance to its primary exceeds about one fifth of the closest approach of the other star, orbital stability is not guaranteed &nbsp;{{mn|GenHabit|21}}. Whether planets might form in binaries at all had long been unclear, given that gravitational forces might interfere with planet formation. Theoretical work by ] at the ] has shown that gas giants can form around stars in binary systems much as they do around solitary stars&nbsp;{{mn|Boss|22}}.


Finally, a larger planet is likely to have a large iron core. This allows for a ] to ] the planet from ] and ], which otherwise would tend to strip away planetary atmosphere and to bombard living things with ionized particles. Mass is not the only criterion for producing a magnetic field—as the planet must also rotate fast enough to produce a ] within its core<ref>{{cite web |url=http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/magnetic/magearth.html |title=Magnetic Field of the Earth |last=Nave |first=C. R. |work=] |publisher=] |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref>—but it is a significant component of the process.
], the nearest star system to the Sun, underscores the fact that binaries need not be discounted in the search for habitable planets. Centauri A and B have an 11&nbsp;AU distance at closest approach (23&nbsp;AU mean), and both should have stable habitable zones. A study of long-term orbital stability for simulated planets within the system shows that planets within approximately three&nbsp;AU of either star may remain stable (i.e. the ] deviating by less than 5 percent). The HZ for Centauri A is conservatively estimated at 1.2 to 1.3&nbsp;AU and Centauri B at 0.73 to 0.74 &mdash; well within the stable region in both cases&nbsp;{{mn|AlphaCentauri|23}}.


The mass of a potentially habitable exoplanet is between 0.1 and 5.0 Earth masses.<ref name="phl.upr.edu"/> However it is possible for a habitable world to have a mass as low as 0.0268 Earth Masses.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Atmospheric Evolution on Low-gravity Waterworlds|date=13 August 2019|author1=Constantin W. Arnscheidt|author2=Robin D. Wordsworth|author3=Feng Ding|journal=The Astrophysical Journal|volume=881|issue=1|page=60|doi=10.3847/1538-4357/ab2bf2|arxiv=1906.10561|bibcode=2019ApJ...881...60A|s2cid=195584241 |doi-access=free }}</ref> The radius of a potentially habitable exoplanet would range between 0.5 and 1.5 Earth radii.<ref name="phl.upr.edu"/>
===Red dwarf systems ===
]s. Any planet around a red dwarf such as the one shown here would have to huddle close to achieve Earth-like temperatures, likely inducing ].]]
Determining the habitability of ] stars could help determine how common life in the universe is, as red dwarfs make up between 70 and 90 percent of all the stars in the galaxy. ]s are likely more numerous than red dwarfs. However, they are not generally classified as stars, and could never support life as we understand it, since what little heat they emit quickly disappears.


=== Orbit and rotation ===
Astronomers for many years ruled out red dwarfs as potential abodes for life. Their small size (from 0.1 to 0.6 solar masses) means that their ]s proceed exceptionally slowly, and they emit very little light (from 3% of that produced by the Sun to as little as 0.01%). Any planet in orbit around a red dwarf would have to huddle very close to its parent star to attain Earth-like surface temperatures; from 0.3 AU (just inside the orbit of ]) for a star like ], to as little as 0.032 ] (such a world would have a year lasting just 6.3 days) for a star like ]&nbsp;{{mn|Proxima|24}}. At those distances, the star's gravity would cause ]. The daylight side of the planet would eternally face the star, while the night-time side would always face away from it. The only way potential life could avoid either an inferno or a deep freeze would be if the planet had an atmosphere thick enough to transfer the star's heat from the day side to the night side. It was long assumed that such a thick atmosphere would prevent sunlight from reaching the surface in the first place, preventing ].
As with other criteria, stability is the critical consideration in evaluating the effect of orbital and rotational characteristics on planetary habitability. ] is the difference between a planet's farthest and closest approach to its parent star divided by the sum of said distances. It is a ratio describing the shape of the elliptical orbit. The greater the eccentricity the greater the temperature fluctuation on a planet's surface. Although they are adaptive, living organisms can stand only so much variation, particularly if the fluctuations overlap both the ] and ] of the planet's main biotic solvent (e.g., water on Earth). If, for example, Earth's oceans were alternately boiling and freezing solid, it is difficult to imagine life as we know it having evolved. The more complex the organism, the greater the temperature sensitivity.<ref>], pp. 122–123.</ref> The Earth's orbit is almost perfectly circular, with an eccentricity of less than 0.02; other planets in the Solar System (with the exception of ]) have eccentricities that are similarly benign.


Habitability is also influenced by the architecture of the planetary system around a star. The evolution and stability of these systems are determined by gravitational dynamics, which drive the orbital evolution of terrestrial planets. Data collected on the orbital eccentricities of extrasolar planets has surprised most researchers: 90% have an orbital eccentricity greater than that found within the Solar System, and the average is fully 0.25.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.astrobio.net/meteoritescomets-and-asteroids/elusive-earths/ |title=Elusive Earths |last=Bortman |first=Henry |date=22 June 2005 |publisher=Astrobiology Magazine |access-date=8 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210619031238/https://www.astrobio.net/meteoritescomets-and-asteroids/elusive-earths/ |archive-date=2021-06-19 |url-status=usurped}}</ref> This means that the vast majority of planets have highly eccentric orbits and of these, even if their average distance from their star is deemed to be within the HZ, they nonetheless would be spending only a small portion of their time within the zone.
This pessimism has been tempered by research. Studies by Robert Haberle and Manoj Joshi of ]'s ] in California have shown that a planet's atmosphere (assuming it were compromised of greenhouse gases ] and ]) need only be 100 ]s, or 10% of Earth's atmosphere, for the star's heat to be effectively carried to the night side&nbsp;{{mn|RDAtmosphere|25}}. This is well within the levels required for photosynthesis, though water would still remain frozen on the dark side in some of their models. Martin Heath of ], has shown that seawater, too, could be effectively circulated without freezing solid if the ocean basins were deep enough to allow free flow beneath the night side's ice cap. Further research—including a consideration of the amount photosynthetically active radiation—suggested that tidally locked planets in Red dwarf systems might at least be habitable for higher plants&nbsp;{{mn|RDWater|26}}.


A planet's movement around its ] must also meet certain criteria if life is to have the opportunity to evolve. A first assumption is that the planet should have moderate ]s. If there is little or no ] (or obliquity) relative to the perpendicular of the ], seasons will not occur and a main stimulant to biospheric dynamism will disappear. The planet would also be colder than it would be with a significant tilt: when the greatest intensity of radiation is always within a few degrees of the equator, warm weather cannot move poleward and a planet's climate becomes dominated by colder polar weather systems.
Size is not the only factor in making red dwarfs potentially unsuitable for life, however. On a red dwarf planet, photosynthesis on the night side would be impossible, since it would never see the sun. On the day side, because the sun does not rise or set, areas in the shadows of mountains would remain so forever. Photosynthesis as we understand it would be complicated by the fact that a red dwarf produces most of its radiation in the ], and on the Earth the process depends on visible light. There are potential positives to this scenario. Numerous terrestrial ecosystems rely on ] rather than photosynthesis, for instance, which would be possible in a red dwarf system. A static primary Star position removes the need for plants to steer leaves toward the sun, deal with changing shade/sun patterns, or change from photosynthesis to stored energy during night. Because of the lack of a day-night cycle, including the weak light of morning and evening, far more energy would be available at a given radiation level.


If a planet is radically tilted, seasons will be extreme and make it more difficult for a ] to achieve ]. The axial tilt of the Earth is higher now (in the ]) than it has been in the past, coinciding with reduced polar ], warmer temperatures and ''less'' seasonal variation. Scientists do not know whether this trend will continue indefinitely with further increases in axial tilt (see ]).
Red dwarfs are far more variable and violent than their more stable, larger cousins. Often they are covered in ]s that can dim their emitted light by up to 40% for months at a time, while at other times they emit gigantic flares that can double their brightness in a matter of minutes&nbsp;{{mn|RDFlares|27}}. Such variation would be very damaging for life, though it might also stimulate evolution by increasing mutation rates and rapidly shifting climatic conditions.


The exact effects of these changes can only be computer modelled at present, and studies have shown that even extreme tilts of up to 85 degrees do not absolutely preclude life "provided it does not occupy continental surfaces plagued seasonally by the highest temperature."<ref>{{cite press release |title=Planetary Tilt Not A Spoiler For Habitation |publisher=] |date =25 August 2003 |url =http://www.psu.edu/ur/2003/planetarytilt.html |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref> Not only the mean axial tilt, but also its variation over time must be considered. The Earth's tilt varies between 21.5 and 24.5 degrees over 41,000 years. A more drastic variation, or a much shorter periodicity, would induce climatic effects such as variations in seasonal severity.
There is, however, one major advantage that red dwarfs have over other stars as abodes for life: they live a long time. It took 4.5 billion years before humanity appeared on Earth, and life as we know it will see suitable conditions for as little as half a billion years more {{mn|TimeLeft|28}}. Red dwarfs, by contrast, could live for trillions of years, because their nuclear reactions are far slower than those of larger stars, meaning that life both would have longer to evolve and longer to survive. Further, while the odds of finding a planet in the habitable zone around any specific red dwarf are slim, the total amount of habitable zone around all red dwarfs combined is equal to the total amount around sun-like stars given their ubiquity&nbsp;{{mn|RDHZ|29}}.


== Other considerations == Other orbital considerations include:
* The planet should rotate relatively quickly so that the day-night cycle is not overlong. If a day takes years, the temperature differential between the day and night side will be pronounced, and problems similar to those noted with extreme orbital eccentricity will come to the fore.
* The planet also should rotate quickly enough so that a magnetic dynamo may be started in its iron core to produce a magnetic field.
* Change in the direction of the axis rotation (]) should not be pronounced. In itself, precession need not affect habitability as it changes the direction of the tilt, not its degree. However, precession tends to accentuate variations caused by other orbital deviations; see ]. Precession on Earth occurs over a 26,000-year cycle.


The Earth's ] appears to play a ] in moderating the Earth's climate by stabilising the axial tilt. It has been suggested that a chaotic tilt may be a "deal-breaker" in terms of habitability—i.e. a satellite the size of the Moon is not only helpful but required to produce stability.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lasker |first1=J. |last2=Joutel |first2=F. |last3=Robutel |first3=P. |date=July 1993 |title=Stabilization of the earth's obliquity by the moon |journal=] |volume=361 |issue=6413 |pages=615–617 |bibcode=1993Natur.361..615L |doi=10.1038/361615a0 |s2cid=4233758 }}</ref> This position remains controversial.<ref group=lower-alpha>According to prevailing theory, the formation of the Moon commenced when a Mars-sized body struck the Earth in a glancing collision late in its formation, and the ejected material coalesced and fell into orbit (see ]). In ''Rare Earth'' Ward and Brownlee emphasize that such impacts ought to be rare, reducing the probability of other Earth-Moon type systems and hence the probability of other habitable planets. Other moon formation processes are possible, however, and the proposition that a planet may be habitable in the absence of a moon has not been disproven.</ref>
==="Good Jupiters"===
"Good Jupiters" are gas giant planets, like the solar system's Jupiter, that orbit their stars in circular orbits far enough away from the HZ to not disturb it but close enough to "protect" terrestrial planets in closer orbit in two critical ways. First, they help to stabilize the orbits, and thereby the climates, of the inner planets. Second, they keep the inner solar system relatively free of comets and asteroids that could cause devastating impacts&nbsp;{{mn|JupiterImpacts|30}}. Jupiter orbits the sun at about five times the distance between the Earth and the Sun. This is the rough distance we should expect to find good Jupiters elsewhere. Jupiter's "caretaker" role was dramatically illustrated in 1994 when ] impacted the giant; had Jovian gravity not captured the comet, it may well have entered the inner solar system.


In the case of the Earth, the sole Moon is sufficiently massive and orbits so as to significantly contribute to ], which in turn aids the dynamic churning of Earth's large liquid water oceans. These lunar forces not only help ensure that the oceans do not stagnate, but also play a critical role in Earth's dynamic climate.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Dorminey|first1=Bruce|title=Without the Moon, Would There Be Life on Earth?|url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/moon-life-tides/|website=scientificamerican.com|publisher=Scientific American|access-date=2018-05-01|date=2009-04-29|quote="Europa must have big tides, so it's my favorite for microbial life," says Max Bernstein, an astrochemist and program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. "Europa is considered by many as the best place to find life in the solar system."}}</ref><ref>File:Tidalwaves1.gif</ref>
Early in the Solar System's history, Jupiter played a somewhat contrary role: it increased the eccentricity of ] orbits and enabled many to cross Earth's orbit and supply the planet with important volatiles. Before Earth reached half its present mass, icy bodies from the Jupiter–Saturn region and small bodies from the primordial asteroid belt supplied water to the Earth due to the gravitational scattering of Jupiter and, to a lesser extent, ]&nbsp;{{mn|Jupiter|31}}. Thus, while the gas giants are now helpful protectors, they were once suppliers of critical habitability material.


===Geology===
===The galactic neighborhood===
]
Scientists have also considered the possibility that particular areas of galaxies ('''galactic habitable zones''') are better suited to life than others; the solar system in which we live, in the ], on the Milky Way galaxy's edge is considered to be in a life-favorable spot&nbsp;{{mn|GHZ|32}}:
]]]
Concentrations of ]s in rocky planet mantles may be critical for the habitability of Earth-like planets. Such planets with higher abundances likely lack ] for a significant fraction of their lifetimes, and those with lower concentrations ]. Planetary dynamos create strong ]s which may often be necessary for life to develop or persist as they shield planets from ]s and ]. The electromagnetic ] of stars could be used to identify those which are more likely to host habitable Earth-like planets. As of 2020, radionuclides are thought to be produced by rare stellar processes such as ]s.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Woo |first1=Marcus |title=Stellar Smashups May Fuel Planetary Habitability, Study Suggests |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/stellar-smashups-may-fuel-planetary-habitability-study-suggests/ |access-date=9 December 2020 |work=Scientific American |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Nimmo |first1=Francis |last2=Primack |first2=Joel |last3=Faber |first3=S. M. |last4=Ramirez-Ruiz |first4=Enrico |last5=Safarzadeh |first5=Mohammadtaher |title=Radiogenic Heating and Its Influence on Rocky Planet Dynamos and Habitability |journal=The Astrophysical Journal |date=10 November 2020 |volume=903 |issue=2 |pages=L37 |doi=10.3847/2041-8213/abc251 |language=en |issn=2041-8213|arxiv=2011.04791|bibcode=2020ApJ...903L..37N |s2cid=226289878 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


Additional geological characteristics may be essential or major factors in the habitability of natural celestial bodies – including some that may shape the body's heat and magnetic field. Some of these are unknown or not well understood and being investigated by ]s, geochemists and others.<ref>{{cite news |title=The existence of a magnetic field beyond 3.5 billion years ago is still up for debate |url=https://phys.org/news/2020-04-magnetic-field-billion-years-debate.html |access-date=28 December 2020 |work=phys.org |language=en}}</ref>{{additional citation needed|date=December 2020|quote=Scientists know that today the Earth's magnetic field is powered by the solidification of the planet's liquid iron core. The cooling and crystallization of the core stirs up the surrounding liquid iron, creating powerful electric currents that generate a magnetic field stretching far out into space. This magnetic field is known as the geodynamo.<br/><br/>Multiple lines of evidence have shown that the Earth's magnetic field existed at least 3.5 billion years ago. However, the planet's core is thought to have started solidifying just 1 billion years ago, meaning that the magnetic field must have been driven by some other mechanism prior to 1 billion years ago. Pinning down exactly when the magnetic field formed could help scientists figure out what generated it to begin with.}}
*It is not in a ] where immense star densities are inimical to life, given excessive radiation and gravitational disturbance. Globular clusters are also primarily composed of older, likely metal-poor, stars.
*It is not near an active ] source.
*It is not near the galactic center where once again star densities increase the likelihood of ionizing radiation (e.g., from ] and ]). A ] is also believed to lie at the middle of the galaxy which might prove a danger to any nearby bodies.
*The circular orbit of the Sun around the galactic centre keeps it out of the way of the galaxy's spiral arms where once more intense radiation and gravitation may lead to disruption&nbsp;{{mn|Dangers|33}}.


====Geochemistry====
Thus, relative loneliness is ultimately what a life-bearing system needs. If Sol were crowded amongst other systems the chance of being fatally close to dangerous radiation sources would increase significantly. Further, close neighbours might disrupt the stability of various orbiting bodies such as ] and ] objects, which can bring catastrophe if knocked into the inner solar system.
{{Further|Geochemistry}}
It is generally assumed that any extraterrestrial life that might exist will be based on the same fundamental ] as found on Earth, as the four elements most vital for life, ], ], ], and ], are also the most common chemically reactive elements in the universe. Indeed, simple biogenic compounds, such as very simple ]s such as ], have been found in ]s and in the ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Organic Molecule, Amino Acid-Like, Found in Constellation Sagittarius |publisher=ScienceDaily |date=2008 |url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/03/080326161658.htm |access-date=20 December 2008 }}</ref> These four elements together comprise over 96% of Earth's collective ]. Carbon has an unparalleled ability to bond with itself and to form a massive array of intricate and varied structures, making it an ideal material for the complex mechanisms that form living ]. Hydrogen and oxygen, in the form of water, compose the solvent in which biological processes take place and in which the first reactions occurred that led to ]. The energy released in the formation of powerful ]s between carbon and oxygen, available by oxidizing organic compounds, is the fuel of all complex life-forms. These four elements together make up ], which in turn are the building blocks of ]s, the substance of living tissue. In addition, neither ] (required for the building of proteins) nor ] (needed for the formation of ], ], and the adenosine phosphates essential to ]) are rare.


Relative abundance in space does not always mirror differentiated abundance within planets; of the four life elements, for instance, only ] is present in any abundance in the Earth's ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/E/elbio.html |title=Elements, biological abundance |last=Darling |first=David |author-link=David Darling (astronomer) |publisher=The Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, Astronomy, and Spaceflight |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref> This can be partly explained by the fact that many of these elements, such as ] and ], along with their simplest and most common compounds, such as ], ], ], ], and water, are gaseous at warm temperatures. In the hot region close to the Sun, these volatile compounds could not have played a significant role in the planets' geological formation. Instead, they were trapped as gases underneath the newly formed crusts, which were largely made of rocky, involatile compounds such as ] (a compound of ] and oxygen, accounting for oxygen's relative abundance). ] of volatile compounds through the first volcanoes would have contributed to the formation of the planets' ]. The ] showed that, with the application of energy, simple inorganic compounds exposed to a primordial atmosphere can react to synthesize ]s.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://zebu.uoregon.edu/internet/l3.html |title=How did chemistry and oceans produce this? |work=The Electronic Universe Project |publisher=] |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref>
While stellar crowding proves disadvantageous to habitability so to does extreme isolation. A star as metal-rich as the Sun would likely not have formed in the very outermost regions of the Milky Way given a decline in the relative abundance of metals and a general lack of star formation. Thus, a "suburban" location, such as our Solar System enjoys, is preferable to a Galaxy's center or farthest reaches&nbsp;{{mn|Dorminey|34}}.


Even so, ] outgassing could not have accounted for the amount of water in Earth's oceans.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://zebu.uoregon.edu/internet/l2.html |title=How did the Earth Get to Look Like This? |work=The Electronic Universe Project |publisher=] |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref> The vast majority of the water—and arguably carbon—necessary for life must have come from the outer Solar System, away from the Sun's heat, where it could remain solid. ]s impacting with the Earth in the Solar System's early years would have deposited vast amounts of water, along with the other volatile compounds life requires, onto the early Earth, providing a kick-start to the ].
===Life's impact on habitability===
An interesting supplement to the factors that support life's emergence is the notion that life itself, once formed, becomes a habitability factor in its own right. An important Earth example was the production of oxygen by ancient ], and eventually photosynthesizing plants, leading to a radical change in the composition of Earth’s atmosphere. This oxygen would prove fundamental to the respiration of later animal species.


Thus, while there is reason to suspect that the four "life elements" ought to be readily available elsewhere, a habitable system probably also requires a supply of long-term orbiting bodies to seed inner planets. Without comets there is a possibility that life as we know it would not exist on Earth.
This interaction between life and subsequent habitability has been explored in various ways. The ], a class of scientific models of the geo-biosphere pioneered by Sir ] in 1975, argues that life as a whole fosters and maintains suitable conditions for itself by helping to create a planetary environment suitable for its continuity; at its most dramatic Gaia suggests that planetary systems behave as a kind of organism. The most successful life forms change the composition of the air, water, and soil in ways that make their continued existence more certain—a controversial extension of the accepted laws of ].


=== Microenvironments and extremophiles ===
The implication that biota reveal concerted foresight would be challenged as unscientific and unfalsifiable. More mainstream researchers have arrived at related conclusions, however, without necessarily accepting the ] implied by Lovelock. David Grinspoon has suggested a "Living Worlds hypothesis" in which our understanding of what constitutes habitability cannot be separated from life already extant on a planet. Planets that are geologically and meteorologically alive are much more likely to be biologically alive as well and "a planet and its life will co-evolve&nbsp;{{mn|Grinspoon|35}}."
] in ] provides an analog to ] and an ideal environment to study the boundary between sterility and habitability.]]
One important qualification to habitability criteria is that only a tiny portion of a planet is required to support life, a so-called Goldilocks Edge or Great Prebiotic Spot. Astrobiologists often concern themselves with "micro-environments", noting that "we lack a fundamental understanding of how evolutionary forces, such as ], ], and ], operate in micro-organisms that act on and respond to changing micro-environments."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://astrobiology.arc.nasa.gov/roadmap/g5.html |title=Understand the evolutionary mechanisms and environmental limits of life |work=Astrobiology: Roadmap |publisher=] |date=September 2003 |access-date=6 August 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110126083203/http://astrobiology.arc.nasa.gov/roadmap/g5.html |archive-date=26 January 2011 }}</ref> ]s are Earth organisms that live in niche environments under severe conditions generally considered ] to life. Usually (although not always) unicellular, extremophiles include acutely ] and ] organisms and others that can survive water temperatures above 100&nbsp;°C in ].


The discovery of life in extreme conditions has complicated definitions of habitability, but also generated much excitement amongst researchers in greatly broadening the known range of conditions under which life can persist. For example, a planet that might otherwise be unable to support an atmosphere given the solar conditions in its vicinity, might be able to do so within a deep shadowed rift or volcanic cave.<ref>{{cite web |first=Stephen |last=Hart |url=http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/astrobio_caves_030617-1.html |title=Cave Dwellers: ET Might Lurk in Dark Places |publisher=] |date=17 June 2003 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030620142504/http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/astrobio_caves_030617-1.html |archive-date=20 June 2003 |access-date=6 August 2007 <!-- alternate copy: http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/cave_slime.html --> }}</ref> Similarly, craterous terrain might offer a refuge for primitive life. The ] has been studied as an astrobiological analog, with researchers suggesting rapid sediment infill created a protected microenvironment for microbial organisms; similar conditions may have occurred over the geological history of ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lindsay |first1=J |last2=Brasier |first2=M |title=Impact Craters as biospheric microenvironments, Lawn Hill Structure, Northern Australia |journal=Astrobiology |volume=6 |issue=2 |date=2006 |pages=348–363 |doi=10.1089/ast.2006.6.348 |pmid=16689651 |bibcode=2006AsBio...6..348L |s2cid=20466013 |url=https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c9796531-6943-4302-9733-8e8616adf78a }}</ref>
In their 2004 book "The Privileged Planet", Guillermo Gonzalez and Jay Richards explore the possible link between the habitability of a planet and its suitability for observing the rest of the universe. This idea of a "privileged" position for Earth life is disputed because of its philosophical implications, especially the violation of the ].


Earth environments that ''cannot'' support life are still instructive to astrobiologists in defining the limits of what organisms can endure. The heart of the ], generally considered the driest place on Earth, appears unable to support life, and it has been subject to study by NASA and ] for that reason: it provides a Mars analog and the moisture gradients along its edges are ideal for studying the boundary between sterility and habitability.<ref>{{cite web|first=Christopher |last=McKay |date=June 2002 |url=http://quest.nasa.gov/challenges/marsanalog/egypt/AtacamaAdAstra.pdf |title=Too Dry for Life: The Atacama Desert and Mars |publisher=] |work=Ames Research Center |access-date=26 August 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090826151945/http://quest.nasa.gov/challenges/marsanalog/egypt/AtacamaAdAstra.pdf |archive-date=26 August 2009 }}</ref> The Atacama was the subject of study in 2003 that partly replicated experiments from the ] landings on Mars in the 1970s; no ] could be recovered from two soil samples, and incubation experiments were also negative for ]s.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Mars-Like Soils in the Atacama Desert, Chile, and the Dry Limit of Microbial Life |journal=Science |date=7 November 2003 |first1=Rafael |last1=Navarro-González |first2=Christopher P. |last2=McKay |volume=302 |issue=5647 |pages=1018–1021 |doi=10.1126/science.1089143 |jstor=3835659 |pmid=14605363 |bibcode=2003Sci...302.1018N |s2cid=18220447 }}</ref>
==See also==
*]
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===Ecological factors===
==Notes==
<div style="font-size: 85%">
{{fnb|1}} This article is a discursive analysis of planetary habitability from the perspective of contemporary physical science. A historical viewpoint on the possibility of habitable planets can be found at ] and ].
For a discussion of the probability of alien life see the ] and ]. Habitable planets are also a staple of fiction; see ].


The two current ecological approaches for predicting the potential habitability use 19 or 20 environmental factors, with emphasis on water availability, temperature, presence of nutrients, an energy source, and protection from solar ultraviolet and ].<ref name='D.C.Golden'>{{cite journal|last1=Schuerger|first1=Andrew C.|last2=Golden|first2=D.C.|last3=Ming|first3=Doug W.|title=Biotoxicity of Mars soils: 1. Dry deposition of analog soils on microbial colonies and survival under Martian conditions|journal=Planetary and Space Science|date=November 2012|volume=72|issue=1|pages=91–101|doi=10.1016/j.pss.2012.07.026|bibcode = 2012P&SS...72...91S }}</ref><ref name=Beaty>{{citation |first=David W. |last=Beaty |title=Findings of the Mars Special Regions Science Analysis Group |journal=Astrobiology |volume=6 |issue=5 |pages=677–732 |editor-last=the Mars Exploration Program Analysis Group (MEPAG) |date=14 July 2006 |url=http://mepag.jpl.nasa.gov/reports/MEPAG_SR-SAG_final1.pdf |access-date=6 June 2013 |display-authors=etal|bibcode=2006AsBio...6..677M |doi=10.1089/ast.2006.6.677 |pmid=17067257 }}</ref>
{{fnb|2}} Life appears to ] on Earth approximately 500 million years after the planet’s formation. "A" class stars (which live 600 million to 1.2 billion years) and a small fraction of "B" class stars (which live 10+ million to 600 million) actually fall within this window. At least theoretically life could emerge in such systems but it would almost certainly not reach a sophisticated level given these timeframes and the fact that increases in luminosity would occur quite rapidly. Life around "O" class stars is exceptionally unlikely, as they live less than ten million years.


{| class="wikitable"
{{fnb|3}} That ] and to a lesser extent ] (respectively, 3.5 and 8 ]s outside our Sun’s putative habitable zone) are considered prime extraterrestrial possibilities underscores the problematic nature of the HZ criterion. In secondary and tertiary descriptions of habitability it is often stated that habitable planets ''must'' be within the HZ—this remains to be proven.
|-
! style="align: center; background: lavender;" colspan="2" | '''Some habitability factors'''<ref name=Beaty/>
|-
|] || {{·}} Activity of liquid water <br /> {{·}} Past or future liquid (ice) inventories <br /> {{·}} ], ], and ] of available water
|-
|Chemical environment || '''Nutrients:''' <br /> {{·}} C, H, N, O, P, S, essential metals, essential micronutrients <br /> {{·}}] <br /> {{·}}Availability/mineralogy <br /> '''Toxin abundances and lethality:''' <br /> {{·}} ] (e.g. Zn, Ni, Cu, Cr, As, Cd, etc.; some are essential, but toxic at high levels) <br /> {{·}} Globally distributed oxidizing soils
|-
|Energy for ] || '''Solar''' (surface and near-surface only) <br /> '''Geochemical''' (subsurface) <br /> {{·}} ] <br /> {{·}} ] <br /> {{·}} ]s
|-
|Conducive <br /> physical conditions || {{·}}Temperature <br /> {{·}}Extreme diurnal temperature fluctuations <br /> {{·}}Low pressure (is there a low-pressure threshold for terrestrial ]?) <br /> {{·}}Strong ] <br /> {{·}}] and ] (long-term accumulated effects) <br /> {{·}} Solar UV-induced volatile oxidants, e.g. ], O<sup>−</sup>, ], O<sub>3</sub> <br /> {{·}}Climate and its variability (geography, seasons, diurnal, and eventually, obliquity variations) <br /> {{·}}Substrate (soil processes, rock microenvironments, dust composition, shielding) <br /> {{·}}High ] concentrations in the global atmosphere <br /> {{·}}Transport (], ground water flow, surface water, glacial)
|}


====Classification terminology====
{{fnb|4}} In '']'', ] and ] evaluate plausible scenarios in which life might form in the cloudtops of Jovian planets. Similarly, ] suggested that the clouds of ] might host life.
<!-- This section has several inbound redirects. -->
The Habitable Exoplanets Catalog<ref name="PHL">{{Cite web |url=http://phl.upr.edu/projects/habitable-exoplanets-catalog/data/database |title=PHL's Exoplanets Catalog - Planetary Habitability Laboratory @ UPR Arecibo |access-date=1 December 2022 |archive-date=21 May 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190521010035/http://phl.upr.edu/projects/habitable-exoplanets-catalog/data/database |url-status=dead }}</ref> uses estimated surface temperature range to classify exoplanets:
* hypopsychroplanets – very cold (<−50&nbsp;°C)
* psychroplanets – cold (<−50 to 0&nbsp;°C)
* mesoplanets – medium temperature (0–50&nbsp;°C; not to be confused with the other definition of ]s)
* thermoplanets – hot (50–100&nbsp;°C)
* hyperthermoplanets – (> 100&nbsp;°C)


Mesoplanets would be ideal for complex life, whereas hypopsychroplanets and hyperthermoplanets might only support ] life.
{{fnb|5}} Interestingly, there is a "mass-gap" in our solar system between Earth and the two smallest gas giants, ] and ], which are both roughly 14 Earth-masses. This is likely coincidence as there is no geophysical barrier to the formation of intermediary bodies (see for instance ]) and we should expect to find planets throughout the galaxy between two and twelve Earth-masses. If the star system is otherwise favourable, such planets would be good candidates for life as they would be large enough to remain internally dynamic and atmosphere retentive over billions of years but not so large as to accrete the gaseous shell which limits the possibility of life formation.


The HEC uses the following terms to classify exoplanets in terms of mass, from least to greatest: asteroidan, mercurian, subterran, terran, superterran, neptunian, and jovian.
{{fnb|6}} There is an emerging consensus that single-celled microorganisms may in fact be common in the universe, especially since Earth’s ]s flourish in environments that were once considered hostile to life. The potential occurrence of complex multi-celled life remains much more controversial. In their work '']'', ] and Donald Brownlee argue that microbial life is likely widespread while complex life is very rare and perhaps even unique to Earth. Current knowledge of Earth’s history partly buttresses this theory: multi-celled organisms are believed to have emerged at the time of the ] close to 600 mya but more than 3 billion years after life itself appeared. That Earth life remained unicellular for so long underscores that the decisive step toward complex organisms need not necessarily occur.


== Alternative star systems ==
{{fnb|7}} According to prevailing theory, the formation of the Moon commenced when a Mars-sized body struck the Earth a glancing collision late in its formation, and the ejected material coalesced and fell into orbit (see ]). In ''Rare Earth'' Ward and Brownlee emphasize that such impacts ought to be rare, reducing the probability of other Earth-Moon type systems and hence the probability of other habitable planets. Other moon formation processes are possible, however, and the proposition that a planet may be habitable in the absence of a moon has not been disproven.
In determining the feasibility of extraterrestrial life, astronomers had long focused their attention on stars like the Sun. However, since planetary systems that resemble the Solar System are proving to be rare, they have begun to explore the possibility that life might form in systems very unlike the Sun's.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Does life exist outside of the solar system? {{!}} Center for Astrophysics {{!}} Harvard & Smithsonian |url=https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/big-questions/does-life-exist-outside-solar-system |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=www.cfa.harvard.edu}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Billings |first=Lee |date=2023-06-01 |title=We Live in the Rarest Type of Planetary System |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/we-live-in-the-rarest-type-of-planetary-system1/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Scientific American |language=en}}</ref>
</div>


It is believed that ], ], ] and ]-type stars could host habitable exoplanets.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/habex/|title=Habitable Exoplanet Observatory (HabEx)|website=www.jpl.nasa.gov|access-date=2020-03-31}}</ref> About half of the stars similar in temperature to the Sun could have a rocky planet able to support liquid water on its surface, according to research using data from NASA's ].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Center|first=By Frank Tavares NASA's Ames Research|title=About Half of Sun-Like Stars Could Host Rocky, Potentially Habitable Planets|url=https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/news/1664/about-half-of-sun-like-stars-could-host-rocky-potentially-habitable-planets/|access-date=2020-11-19|website=Exoplanet Exploration: Planets Beyond our Solar System}}</ref>
==References==


===Primary=== === Binary systems ===
{{Main|Habitability of binary star systems}}
<div style="font-size: 85%">
Typical estimates often suggest that 50% or more of all stellar systems are ]. This may be partly sample bias, as massive and bright stars tend to be in binaries and these are most easily observed and catalogued; a more precise analysis has suggested that the more common fainter stars are usually singular, and that up to two thirds of all stellar systems are therefore solitary.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Most Milky Way Stars Are Single |publisher=] |date=30 January 2006 |url =http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/press/2006/pr200611.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070813062958/http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/press/2006/pr200611.html |archive-date=13 August 2007 |url-status=dead |access-date=5 June 2007 }}</ref>


The separation between stars in a binary may range from less than one ] (AU, the average Earth–Sun distance) to several hundred. In latter instances, the gravitational effects will be negligible on a planet orbiting an otherwise suitable star and habitability potential will not be disrupted unless the orbit is highly eccentric. However, where the separation is significantly less, a stable orbit may be impossible. If a planet's distance to its primary exceeds about one fifth of the closest approach of the other star, orbital stability is not guaranteed.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.solstation.com/habitable.htm |title=Stars and Habitable Planets |work=solstation.com |publisher=Sol Company |access-date=5 June 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110628175616/http://www.solstation.com/habitable.htm |archive-date=28 June 2011 }}</ref> Whether planets might form in binaries at all had long been unclear, given that gravitational forces might interfere with planet formation. Theoretical work by ] at the ] has shown that gas giants can form around stars in binary systems much as they do around solitary stars.<ref>{{cite press release|title=Planetary Systems can from around Binary Stars |publisher=] |url=http://carnegieinstitution.org/news_releases/news_0601_10.html |author=Boss, Alan |date=January 2006 |access-date=5 June 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515225714/http://carnegieinstitution.org/news_releases/news_0601_10.html |archive-date=15 May 2011 }}</ref>
{{mnb|HabCat|1}} Turnbull, Margaret C., and Jill C. Tarter. "Target selection for SETI: A catalog of nearby habitable stellar systems," ''The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series'', 145: 181-198, March 2003. (). ''Habitability criteria defined—the foundational source for this article.''


One study of ], the nearest star system to the Sun, suggested that binaries need not be discounted in the search for habitable planets. Centauri A and B have an 11&nbsp;AU distance at closest approach (23&nbsp;AU mean), and both should have stable habitable zones. A study of long-term orbital stability for simulated planets within the system shows that planets within approximately three&nbsp;AU of either star may remain rather stable (i.e. the ] deviating by less than 5% during 32&nbsp;000 binary periods). The continuous habitable zone (CHZ for 4.5 billion years) for ] is conservatively estimated at 1.2 to 1.3&nbsp;AU and Centauri B at 0.73 to 0.74—well within the stable region in both cases.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wiegert |first1=Paul A. |last2=Holman |first2=Matt J. |date=April 1997 |title=The stability of planets in the Alpha Centauri system |journal=The Astronomical Journal |volume=113 |issue=4 |pages=1445–1450 |bibcode=1997AJ....113.1445W |doi=10.1086/118360 |arxiv=astro-ph/9609106 |s2cid=18969130 }}</ref>
{{mnb|UVradiation|3}} Kasting, J.F., D.C.B. Whittet, and W.R. Sheldon. "Ultraviolet radiation from F and K stars and implications for planetary habitability," ''Origins of Life'', 27, 413-420, August 1997. ( abstract on-line). ''Radiation by spectral type considered.''


=== Red dwarf systems ===
{{mnb|HZs|4}} Kasting, J.F., D.P. Whitmore, R.T. Reynolds. "Habitable Zones Around Main Sequence Stars," ''Icarus'' 101, 108-128, 1993. (). ''Detailed overview of habitable zone estimates.''
{{Main|Habitability of red dwarf systems}}
]. Any planet around a red dwarf such as the one shown here (]) would have to huddle close to achieve Earth-like temperatures, probably inducing tidal locking. See ]. Credit: MPIA/V. Joergens.]]M-type stars also considered possible hosts of habitable exoplanets, even those with flares such as Proxima b. Determining the habitability of ] stars could help determine how common life in the universe might be, as red dwarfs make up between 70 and 90% of all the stars in the galaxy. However, it is important to bear in mind that flare stars could greatly reduce the habitability of exoplanets by eroding their atmosphere.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Habitable Exoplanet Observatory (HabEx) |url=https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/habex/ |access-date=2020-03-31 |website=www.jpl.nasa.gov}}</ref>


=== Size ===
{{mnb|metals|7}} Santos, Nuno C., Garik Israelian and Michel Mayor. "Confirming the Metal-Rich Nature of Stars with Giant Planets," ''Proceedings of 12th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and The Sun,'' University of Colorado, 2003. (). ''Metallicity and the occurrence of extra-solar planets.''
Astronomers for many years ruled out red dwarfs as potential abodes for life. Their small size (from 0.08 to 0.45 solar masses) means that their ]s proceed exceptionally slowly, and they emit very little light (from 3% of that produced by the Sun to as little as 0.01%). Any planet in orbit around a red dwarf would have to huddle very close to its parent star to attain Earth-like surface temperatures; from 0.3 AU (just inside the orbit of ]) for a star like ], to as little as 0.032 AU for a star like ]<ref>{{cite web |title=Habitable zones of stars |url=http://exobio.ucsd.edu/Space_Sciences/zones.htm |work=NASA Specialized Center of Research and Training in Exobiology |publisher=], San Diego |url-status=dead |archive-date=21 November 2000 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20001121121500/http://exobio.ucsd.edu/Space_Sciences/zones.htm |access-date=11 May 2007 }}</ref> (such a world would have a year lasting just 6.3 days). At those distances, the star's gravity would cause tidal locking. One side of the planet would eternally face the star, while the other would always face away from it. The only ways in which potential life could avoid either an inferno or a deep freeze would be if the planet had an atmosphere thick enough to transfer the star's heat from the day side to the night side, or if there was a gas giant in the habitable zone, with a ], which would be locked to the planet instead of the star, allowing a more even distribution of radiation over the moon. It was long assumed that such a thick atmosphere would prevent sunlight from reaching the surface in the first place, preventing ].


], a potentially habitable planet orbiting a red dwarf constituent in a ]]]This pessimism has been tempered by research. Studies by Robert Haberle and Manoj Joshi of ]'s ] in California have shown that a planet's atmosphere (assuming it included greenhouse gases ] and ]) need only be {{convert|100|mb|atm|2}}, for the star's heat to be effectively carried to the night side.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Joshi |first1=M. M. |last2=Haberle |first2=R. M. |last3=Reynolds |first3=R. T. |date=October 1997 |title=Simulations of the Atmospheres of Synchronously Rotating Terrestrial Planets Orbiting M Dwarfs: Conditions for Atmospheric Collapse and the Implications for Habitability |journal=Icarus |volume=129 |issue=2 |pages=450–465 |doi=10.1006/icar.1997.5793 |bibcode=1997Icar..129..450J |url=http://crack.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/gillett/joshi.pdf |access-date=4 April 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110814012947/http://crack.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/gillett/joshi.pdf |archive-date=14 August 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> This is well within the levels required for photosynthesis, though water would still remain frozen on the dark side in some of their models. Martin Heath of ], has shown that seawater, too, could be effectively circulated without freezing solid if the ocean basins were deep enough to allow free flow beneath the night side's ice cap. Further research—including a consideration of the amount of photosynthetically active radiation—suggested that tidally locked planets in red dwarf systems might at least be habitable for higher plants.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Heath |first1=Martin J. |last2=Doyle |first2=Laurance R. |last3=Joshi |first3=Manoj M. |author4=Haberle, Robert M. |date=1999 |title=Habitability of Planets Around Red Dwarf Stars |journal=Origins of Life and Evolution of the Biosphere |volume=29 |issue=4 |pages=405–424 |url=http://www.as.utexas.edu/astronomy/education/spring02/scalo/heath.pdf |doi=10.1023/A:1006596718708 |pmid=10472629 |bibcode=1999OLEB...29..405H |s2cid=12329736 |access-date=11 August 2007 }}</ref>
{{mnb|Obliquity|16}} Laskar, J., F. Joutel and P. Robutel. "Stabilization of the earth's obliquity by the moon," ''Nature'', 361, 615-617, July 1993. ( abstract on-line). ''Necessity of Moon for stable obliquity considered.''


==== Other factors limiting habitability ====
{{mnb|AlphaCentauri|23}} Wiegert, Paul A., and Matt J. Holman. "The stability of planets in the Alpha Centauri system," ''The Astronomical Journal'' vol. 113, no. 4, April 1997 (). ''Potentially stable orbits and habitable zones around Alpha Centauri A and B.''
Size is not the only factor in making red dwarfs potentially unsuitable for life, however. On a red dwarf planet, photosynthesis on the night side would be impossible, since it would never see the sun. On the day side, because the sun does not rise or set, areas in the shadows of mountains would remain so forever. ] as we understand it would be complicated by the fact that a red dwarf produces most of its radiation in the ], and on the Earth the process depends on visible light. There are potential positives to this scenario. Numerous terrestrial ecosystems rely on ] rather than photosynthesis, for instance, which would be possible in a red dwarf system. A static primary star position removes the need for plants to steer leaves toward the sun, deal with changing shade/sun patterns, or change from photosynthesis to stored energy during night. Because of the lack of a day-night cycle, including the weak light of morning and evening, far more energy would be available at a given radiation level.


Red dwarfs are far more variable and violent than their more stable, larger cousins. Often they are covered in ]s that can dim their emitted light by up to 40% for months at a time, while at other times they emit gigantic flares that can double their brightness in a matter of minutes.<ref>{{cite web |first=Ken |last=Croswell |url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg16922754.200-red-willing-and-able.html |title=Red, willing and able |date=27 January 2001 |type=www.kencroswell.com/reddwarflife.html Full reprint |publisher=] |access-date=5 August 2007 }}</ref> Such variation would be very damaging for life, as it would not only destroy any complex organic molecules that could possibly form biological precursors, but also because it would blow off sizeable portions of the planet's atmosphere.
{{mnb|RDAtmosphere|25}} Joshi, M.M., R. M. Haberle, and R. T. Reynolds. "Simulations of the Atmospheres of Synchronously Rotating Terrestrial
Planets Orbiting M Dwarfs: Conditions for Atmospheric Collapse and
the Implications for Habitability," ''Icarus'', 129, 450–465, 1997 (). ''Analysis and modelling of atmospheric pressure on planets in Red Dwarf systems.''


For a planet around a red dwarf star to support life, it would require a rapidly rotating magnetic field to protect it from the flares. A tidally locked planet rotates only very slowly, and so cannot produce a geodynamo at its core. The violent flaring period of a red dwarf's life cycle is estimated to only last roughly the first 1.2 billion years of its existence. If a planet forms far away from a red dwarf so as to avoid tidal locking, and then migrates into the star's habitable zone after this turbulent initial period, it is possible that life may have a chance to develop.<ref>{{cite web |title=AstronomyCast episode 40: American Astronomical Society Meeting, May 2007 |work=Universe Today |last1=Cain |first1=Fraser |last2=Gay |first2=Pamela |author-link2=Pamela L. Gay |url=http://www.astronomycast.com/2007/06/episode-40-american-astronomical-society-meeting-may-2007/ |date=2007 |access-date=17 June 2007 }}</ref> However, observations of the 7 to 12-billion year old ] showcase that even old red dwarfs can have significant flare activity. Barnard's Star was long assumed to have little activity, but in 1998 astronomers observed an intense ], showing that it is a ].<ref name=Flare>{{cite web| first=Ken | last=Croswell |date=November 2005| url=http://www.astronomy.com/news/2005/11/a-flare-for-barnards-star| access-date=2006-08-10 | title=A Flare for Barnard's Star| work=Astronomy Magazine | publisher=Kalmbach Publishing Co }}</ref>
{{mnb|RDWater|26}} Heath, Martin J., Laurance R. Doyle, Manoj M. Joshi, and Robert M.
Haberle. "Habitability of Planets Around Red Dwarf Stars,"
''Origins of Life and Evolution of the Biosphere,'' vol. 29, no. 4, 405-424, 1999 (). ''Water cycle, photosynthetic radiation, and the affect of flares on planets in Red Dwarf systems.''


==== Longevity and ubiquity ====
{{mnb|Jupiter|31}} Lunine, Jonathon I. "The occurrence of Jovian planets and the habitability
of planetary systems," ''Proceedings of the National Academy of Science'' vol. 98, no. 3, 809-814, January 30, 2001 (). ''The role of Jupiter in seeding the early Earth.''


Red dwarfs have one advantage over other stars as abodes for life: far greater longevity. It took 4.5 billion years before humanity appeared on Earth, and life as we know it will see suitable conditions for 1<ref>{{cite press release |title='The end of the world' has already begun, UW scientists say |publisher=] |url=http://www.washington.edu/news/2003/01/13/the-end-of-the-world-has-already-begun-uw-scientists-say/|author=Hines, Sandra |date=13 January 2003 |access-date=5 June 2007 }}</ref> to 2.3<ref name=pnas1_24_9576>{{cite journal |last1=Li |first1=King-Fai |last2=Pahlevan |first2=Kaveh |last3=Kirschvink |first3=Joseph L. |last4=Yung |first4=Yuk L. |date=2009 |title=Atmospheric pressure as a natural climate regulator for a terrestrial planet with a biosphere |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=106 |issue=24 |pages=9576–9579 |url=http://www.gps.caltech.edu/~kfl/paper/Li_PNAS2009.pdf |doi=10.1073/pnas.0809436106 |pmid=19487662 |pmc=2701016 |bibcode=2009PNAS..106.9576L |access-date=19 July 2009 |doi-access=free }}</ref> {{nowrap |billion years}} more. Red dwarfs, by contrast, could live for trillions of years because their nuclear reactions are far slower than those of larger stars, meaning that life would have longer to evolve and survive.
</div>


While the likelihood of finding a planet in the habitable zone around any specific red dwarf is slight, the total amount of habitable zone around all red dwarfs combined is equal to the total amount around Sun-like stars given their ubiquity.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=1694 |title=M Dwarfs: The Search for Life is On, Interview with Todd Henry |date=29 August 2005 |publisher=Astrobiology Magazine |access-date=5 August 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110603230636/http://www.astrobio.net/interview/1694/m-dwarfs-the-search-for-life-is-on |archive-date=2011-06-03 |url-status=usurped}}</ref> Furthermore, this total amount of habitable zone will last longer, because red dwarf stars live for hundreds of billions of years or even longer on the main sequence.<ref name="Red Dwarfs Universe Today">{{cite web |last=Cain |first=Fraser |title=Red Dwarf Stars |url=http://www.universetoday.com/24670/red-dwarf-stars/ |publisher=Universe Today |date=4 February 2009}}</ref> However, combined with the above disadvantages, it is more likely that red dwarf stars would remain habitable longer to microbes, while the shorter-lived yellow dwarf stars, like the Sun, would remain habitable longer to animals.
===Secondary===
<div style="font-size: 85%">


=== Massive stars ===
{{mnb|StarTables|2}} , California State University, Los Angeles.
Recent research suggests that very large stars, greater than ~100 solar masses, could have planetary systems consisting of hundreds of Mercury-sized planets within the habitable zone. Such systems could also contain ] and low-mass stars (~0.1–0.3 solar masses).<ref>{{cite journal |title=The outcome of the protoplanetary disk of very massive stars, January 2011 |journal=New Astronomy |last1=Kashi |first1=Amit |last2=Soker |first2=Noam |doi=10.1016/j.newast.2010.06.003 |bibcode=2011NewA...16...27K |date=2011 |volume=16 |issue=1 |pages=27–32 |arxiv=1002.4693 |citeseerx=10.1.1.770.1250 |s2cid=119255193 }}</ref> However the very short lifespans of stars of more than a few solar masses would scarcely allow time for a planet to cool, let alone the time needed for a stable biosphere to develop. Massive stars are thus eliminated as possible abodes for life.<ref>]</ref>


However, a massive-star system could be a progenitor of life in another way – the ] explosion of the massive star in the central part of the system. This supernova will disperse heavier elements throughout its vicinity, created during the phase when the massive star has moved off of the main sequence, and the systems of the potential low-mass stars (which are still on the main sequence) within the former massive-star system may be enriched with the relatively large supply of the heavy elements so close to a supernova explosion. However, this states nothing about what types of planets would form as a result of the supernova material, or what their habitability potential would be.
{{mnb|Iceage|5}} , University of Washington.


=== Neutron stars ===
{{mnb|Scorpii|6}} , www.solstation.com.
{{Main|Habitability of neutron star systems}}


=== Post-main sequence stars ===
{{mnb|GiantSats|8}} Motivate videoconferences for schools.
{{Main|Red giant#Prospects for habitability}}


==Four classes of habitable planets based on water==
{{mnb|SatelliteLife|9}} , www.ibiblio.org.


In a review of the factors which are important for the evolution of habitable Earth-sized planets, Lammer et al. proposed a classification of four water-dependent habitat types:<ref name="Review 2009"/><ref name="Forget 2013">{{cite journal |title=On the probability of habitable planets |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |date=July 2013 |last= Forget |first=François |volume=12 |issue=3 |pages=177–185 |doi=10.1017/S1473550413000128 |arxiv = 1212.0113 |bibcode = 2013IJAsB..12..177F |s2cid=118534798 }}</ref>
{{mnb|Tectonics|10}} Ward, Peter and Donald Brownlee. ''],'' pp. 191-220, Springer, 2000.


''Class I'' habitats are planetary bodies on which stellar and geophysical conditions allow liquid water to be available at the surface, along with sunlight, so that complex ]s may originate.
{{mnb|Core|11}} , James Madison University, Geology.


''Class II'' habitats include bodies which initially enjoy Earth-like conditions, but do not keep their ability to sustain liquid water on their surface due to stellar or geophysical conditions. Mars, and possibly Venus are examples of this class where complex life forms may not develop.
{{mnb|Magnetic|12}} , Georgia State University.


''Class III'' habitats are planetary bodies where liquid water oceans exist below the surface, where they can interact directly with a silicate-rich ].
{{mnb|TempRange|13}} ''Rare Earth'', pp. 122-123.
:Such a situation can be expected on water-rich planets located too far from their star to allow surface liquid water, but on which subsurface water is in liquid form because of the ]. Two examples of such an environment are ] and ]. In such worlds, not only is light not available as an energy source, but the organic material brought by meteorites (thought to have been necessary to start life in some scenarios) may not easily reach the liquid water. If a planet can only harbor life below its surface, the ] would not likely modify the whole planetary environment in an observable way, thus, detecting its presence on an exoplanet would be extremely difficult.


''Class IV'' habitats have liquid water layers between two ice layers, or liquids above ice.
{{mnb|Exoplanets|14}} Bortman, Henry. , Astrobiology Magazine, June 22, 2005.
:If the water layer is thick enough, water at its base will be in solid phase (ice polymorphs) because of the high pressure. ] and ] are likely examples of this class. Their oceans are thought to be enclosed between thick ice layers. In such conditions, the emergence of even simple life forms may be very difficult because the necessary ingredients for life will likely be completely diluted.


== The galactic neighborhood ==
{{mnb|Tilt|15}} , Penn State release, August 25 2003.
Along with the characteristics of planets and their star systems, the wider galactic environment may also impact habitability. Scientists considered the possibility that particular areas of galaxies (]s) are better suited to life than others; the Solar System, in the ], on the Milky Way galaxy's edge is considered to be in a life-favorable spot:<ref>{{cite web |first=Leslie |last=Mullen |url=http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=139 |title=Galactic Habitable Zones |date=18 May 2001 |publisher=Astrobiology Magazine |access-date=5 August 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110603230653/http://www.astrobio.net/exclusive/139/galactic-habitable-zones |archive-date=2011-06-03 |url-status=usurped}}</ref>
* It is not in a ] where immense star densities are inimical to life, given excessive radiation and gravitational disturbance. Globular clusters are also primarily composed of older, probably metal-poor, stars. Furthermore, in globular clusters, the great ages of the stars would mean a large amount of ] by the host or other nearby stars, which due to their proximity may cause extreme harm to life on any planets, provided that they can form.
* It is not near an active ] source.
* It is not near the galactic center where once again star densities increase the likelihood of ionizing radiation (e.g., from ]s and ]). The ]s at the centers of galaxies may also prove a danger to any nearby bodies.
* The circular orbit of the Sun around the galactic center keeps it out of the way of the galaxy's spiral arms where intense radiation and gravitation may again lead to disruption.<ref>], pp. 26–29.</ref>


Thus, relative isolation is ultimately what a life-bearing system needs. If the Sun were crowded amongst other systems, the chance of being fatally close to dangerous radiation sources would increase significantly. Further, close neighbors might disrupt the stability of various orbiting bodies such as ] and ] objects, which can bring catastrophe if knocked into the inner Solar System.
{{mnb|Elements|17}} David Darling Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, Astronomy and Spaceflight.


While stellar crowding proves disadvantageous to habitability, so too does extreme isolation. A star as metal-rich as the Sun would probably not have formed in the very outermost regions of the Milky Way given a decline in the relative abundance of metals and a general lack of star formation. Thus, a "suburban" location, such as the Solar System enjoys, is preferable to a Galaxy's center or farthest reaches.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Dorminey |first=Bruce |date=July 2005 |title=Dark Threat |journal=] |pages=40–45 |bibcode=2005Ast....33g..40D |volume=33|issue=7 }}
{{mnb|Oceans|18}} , Electronic Universe Project, University of Oregon.
</ref>


== Other considerations ==
{{mnb|Water|19}} , Electronic Universe Project, University of Oregon.


=== Alternative biochemistries ===
{{mnb|PcgtBinary|20}} , Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics press release, January 30 2006.
{{Main|Hypothetical types of biochemistry}}
While most investigations of extraterrestrial life start with the assumption that advanced life-forms must have similar requirements for life as on Earth, the hypothesis of ] suggests the possibility of lifeforms evolving around a different metabolic mechanism. In '']'', ] ] and ] ] argue ], based on the ], is restrictive and unimaginative. They suggest that ] may be very rare, but non-carbon-based complex life could possibly emerge in other environments. The most frequently mentioned alternative to carbon is ], while ] and ] are sometimes suggested as ] to water. The astrobiologist ] and other scientists have proposed a Planet Habitability Index whose criteria include "potential for holding a liquid solvent" that is not necessarily restricted to water.<ref>{{cite news| title= Which alien worlds are most livable?| work=NBC News| date=2011-11-22| author=Alan Boyle |access-date=2015-03-20|url= http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2011/11/22/8956644-which-alien-worlds-are-most-livable}}</ref><ref>
{{cite journal
|author=Dirk Schulze-Makuch
|display-authors=etal
|title=A Two-Tiered Approach to Assessing the Habitability of Exoplanets
|date=Dec 2011
|journal=]
|volume=11 |issue=10 |pages=1041–1052
|doi=10.1089/ast.2010.0592
|pmid=22017274
|bibcode = 2011AsBio..11.1041S }}</ref>


More speculative ideas have focused on bodies altogether different from Earth-like planets. Astronomer ], a well-known proponent of the search for ], imagined life on a ]: submicroscopic "nuclear molecules" combining to form creatures with a life cycle millions of times quicker than Earth life.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Drake |first=Frank |title=Life on a Neutron Star |journal=Astronomy |volume=1 |issue=5 |page=5 |date=1973 }}</ref> Called "imaginative and tongue-in-cheek", the idea gave rise to science fiction depictions.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/N/neutronstarlife.html |title=Neutron star, life on |last=Darling |first=David |author-link=David Darling (astronomer) |publisher=The Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, Astronomy, and Spaceflight |access-date=5 September 2009 }}</ref> ], another optimist with regards to extraterrestrial life, considered the possibility of organisms that are always airborne within the high atmosphere of Jupiter in a 1976 paper.<ref name="Sagan, C. 1976">{{cite journal |bibcode=1976ApJS...32..737S |doi=10.1086/190414 |title=Particles, environments, and possible ecologies in the Jovian atmosphere |date=1976 |last1=Sagan |first1=C. |last2=Salpeter |first2=E. E. |journal=The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series |volume=32 |page=737|hdl=2060/19760019038 |hdl-access=free }}</ref><ref name="Darling">{{cite web |url=http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/J/Jupiterlife.html |title=Jupiter, life on |last=Darling |first=David |author-link=David Darling (astronomer) |publisher=The Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, Astronomy, and Spaceflight |access-date=6 August 2007 |archive-date=10 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120210170824/http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/J/Jupiterlife.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Cohen and Stewart also envisioned life in both a solar environment and in the atmosphere of a gas giant.
{{mnb|GenHabit|21}} , www.solstation.com.


==="Good Jupiters"===
{{mnb|Boss|22}} , Carnegie Institute release, January 15 2006.
"Good Jupiters" are gas giants, like the Solar System's ], that orbit their stars in circular orbits far enough away from the habitable zone not to disturb it but close enough to "protect" terrestrial planets in closer orbit in two critical ways. First, they help to stabilize the orbits, and thereby the climates of the inner planets. Second, they keep the inner stellar system relatively free of comets and asteroids that could cause devastating impacts.<ref>{{cite web |first=Henry |last=Bortman |url=http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=1222 |title=Coming Soon: "Good" Jupiters |date=29 September 2004 |publisher=Astrobiology Magazine |access-date=5 August 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120208071539/http://astrobio.net/exclusive/1222/coming-soon-good-jupiters |archive-date=2012-02-08 |url-status=usurped}}</ref> Jupiter orbits the Sun at about five times the distance between the Earth and the Sun. This is the rough distance we should expect to find good Jupiters elsewhere. Jupiter's "caretaker" role was dramatically illustrated in 1994 when ] impacted the giant.{{whom|date=April 2024}}


However, the evidence is not quite so clear. Research has shown that Jupiter's role in determining the rate at which objects hit Earth is significantly more complicated than once thought.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Horner |first1=Jonathan |last2=Jones |first2=Barrie |title=Jupiter – Friend or Foe? An answer |journal=Astronomy and Geophysics |date=December 2010 |volume=51 |issue=6 |pages=16–22 |doi=10.1111/j.1468-4004.2010.51616.x |bibcode=2010A&G....51f..16H |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Horner |first1=Jonathan |last2=Jones |first2=B. W. |title=Jupiter – Friend or Foe? I: The Asteroids |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |date=October 2008 |volume=7 |pages=251–261 |doi=10.1017/S1473550408004187 |bibcode=2008IJAsB...7..251H |issue=3–4 |arxiv=0806.2795 |s2cid=8870726 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Horner |first1=Jonathan |last2=Jones |first2=B. W. |title=Jupiter – friend or foe? II: the Centaurs |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |date=April 2009 |volume=8 |issue=2 |pages=75–80 |doi=10.1017/S1473550408004357 |bibcode=2009IJAsB...8...75H |arxiv=0903.3305 |s2cid=8032181 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Horner |first1=Jonathan |last2=Jones |first2=B. W. |last3=Chambers |first3=J. |title=Jupiter – friend or foe? III: the Oort cloud comets |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |date=January 2010 |volume=9 |issue=1 |pages=1–10 |doi=10.1017/S1473550409990346 |bibcode=2010IJAsB...9....1H |arxiv=0911.4381 |s2cid=1103987 }}</ref>
{{mnb|Proxima|24}} , University of California.


The role of Jupiter in the early history of the Solar System is somewhat better established, and the source of significantly less debate.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Batygin |first1=Konstantin |last2=Laughlin |first2=Greg |date=2015-04-07 |title=Jupiter's decisive role in the inner Solar System's early evolution |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=112 |issue=14 |pages=4214–4217 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1423252112 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=4394287 |pmid=25831540|arxiv=1503.06945 |bibcode=2015PNAS..112.4214B }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Naoz |first=Smadar |date=2015-04-07 |title=Jupiter's role in sculpting the early Solar System |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=112 |issue=14 |pages=4189–4190 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1503865112 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=4394300 |pmid=25825762|bibcode=2015PNAS..112.4189N }}</ref> Early in the Solar System's history, Jupiter is accepted as having played an important role in the hydration of our planet: it increased the eccentricity of ] orbits and enabled many to cross Earth's orbit and supply the planet with important volatiles such as water and carbon dioxide. Before Earth reached half its present mass, icy bodies from the Jupiter–Saturn region and small bodies from the primordial asteroid belt supplied water to the Earth due to the gravitational scattering of Jupiter and, to a lesser extent, ].<ref>{{cite journal |last=Lunine |first=Jonathan I. |date=30 January 2001 |title=The occurrence of Jovian planets and the habitability of planetary systems |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=98 |issue=3 |pages=809–814 |doi=10.1073/pnas.98.3.809 |pmid=11158551 |pmc=14664 |bibcode=2001PNAS...98..809L |doi-access=free }}</ref> Thus, while the gas giants are now helpful protectors, they were once suppliers of critical habitability material.
{{mnb|RDFlares|27}} , www.kencroswell.com, published in ''New Scientist'' January 27, 2001.


In contrast, Jupiter-sized bodies that orbit too close to the habitable zone but not in it (as in ]), or have a highly elliptical orbit that crosses the habitable zone (like ]) make it very difficult for an independent Earth-like planet to exist in the system. See the discussion of a ] above. However, during the process of migrating into a habitable zone, a Jupiter-size planet may capture a terrestrial planet as a moon. Even if such a planet is initially loosely bound and following a strongly inclined orbit, gravitational interactions with the star can stabilize the new moon into a close, circular orbit that is coplanar with the planet's orbit around the star.<ref>{{citation |last1=Porter |first1=Simon B. |last2=Grundy |first2=William M. |title=Post-capture Evolution of Potentially Habitable Exomoons |journal=The Astrophysical Journal Letters |volume=736 |issue=1 |page=L14 |date=July 2011 |doi=10.1088/2041-8205/736/1/L14 |bibcode=2011ApJ...736L..14P |arxiv=1106.2800 |s2cid=118574839 }}</ref>
{{mnb|TimeLeft|28}} , University of Washington release, January 13, 2003.


=== Life's impact on habitability ===
{{mnb|RDHZ|29}} , Astrobiology Magazine, August 29, 2005.
A supplement to the factors that support life's emergence is the notion that life itself, once formed, becomes a habitability factor in its own right. An important Earth example was the production of molecular oxygen gas ({{chem|O|2}}) by ancient ], and eventually photosynthesizing plants, leading to a radical change in the composition of Earth's atmosphere. This environmental change is called the ]. This oxygen proved fundamental to the ] of later animal species. The ], a scientific model of the geo-biosphere pioneered by ] in 1975, argues that life as a whole fosters and maintains suitable conditions for itself by helping to create a planetary environment suitable for its continuity. Similarly, ] has suggested a "living worlds hypothesis" in which our understanding of what constitutes habitability cannot be separated from life already extant on a planet. Planets that are geologically and meteorologically alive are much more likely to be biologically alive as well and "a planet and its life will co-evolve."<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=1720 |title=The Living Worlds Hypothesis |date=22 September 2005 |publisher=Astrobiology Magazine |access-date=6 August 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110603230659/http://www.astrobio.net/interview/1720/the-living-worlds-hypothesis |archive-date=2011-06-03 |url-status=usurped}}</ref> This is the basis of ].


=== The role of chance ===
{{mnb|JupiterImpacts|30}} Bortman, Henry. , Astrobiology Magazine, September 29, 2004.
In 2020, a computer simulation of the evolution of planetary climates over 3 billion years suggested that feedback is a necessary but insufficient condition for preventing planets from ever becoming too hot or cold for life. Chance also plays a crucial role.<ref>{{cite news |title=Chance played a major role in keeping Earth fit for life |url=https://phys.org/news/2020-12-chance-major-role-earth-life.html |access-date=17 January 2021 |work=phys.org |language=en}}</ref><ref name="10.1038/s43247-020-00057-8">{{cite journal |last1=Tyrrell |first1=Toby |title=Chance played a role in determining whether Earth stayed habitable |journal=Communications Earth & Environment |date=11 December 2020 |volume=1 |issue=1 |page=61 |doi=10.1038/s43247-020-00057-8 |bibcode=2020ComEE...1...61T |s2cid=228086341 |language=en |issn=2662-4435|doi-access=free }} ] Available under .</ref> Related considerations include yet unknown factors influencing the thermal habitability of planets such as "feedback mechanism (or mechanisms) that prevents the climate ever wandering to fatal temperatures".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Tyrrell |first1=Toby |title=Earth has stayed habitable for billions of years – exactly how lucky did we get? |url=https://theconversation.com/earth-has-stayed-habitable-for-billions-of-years-exactly-how-lucky-did-we-get-153416 |website=The Conversation |date=19 January 2021 |access-date=30 January 2021 |language=en}}</ref>


== See also ==
{{mnb|GHZ|32}} Mullen, Leslie. , Astrobiology Magazine, May 18 2001.
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
* {{annotated link|Astrobotany}}
* {{annotated link|Habitable zone}}
* {{annotated link|Darwin (spacecraft)}}
* {{annotated link|Earth analog}}
* {{annotated link|Exoplanet}}
* {{annotated link|Exoplanet orbital and physical parameters|Exoplanetology}}
* {{annotated link|Extraterrestrial liquid water}}
* {{annotated link|Habitability of natural satellites}}
* {{annotated link|Habitability of red dwarf systems}}
* '']''
* {{annotated link|List of potentially habitable exoplanets}}
* {{annotated link|Neocatastrophism}}
* {{annotated link|Rare Earth hypothesis}}
* {{annotated link|Space colonization}}
* {{annotated link|Superhabitable planet}}
* {{annotated link|Terraforming}}
{{div col end}}


== Notes ==
{{mnb|Dangers|33}} ''Rare Earth'', pp. 26-29.
{{Reflist|group=lower-alpha}}


== References ==
{{mnb|Dorminey|34}} Dorminey, Bruce. "Dark Threat." Astronomy July 2005: pp. 40-45
{{Reflist}}


==Bibliography==
{{mnb|Grinspoon|35}} , Astrobiology Magazine, September 22, 2005.
* {{cite book|ref=Ward|author= Ward, Peter |author2=Brownlee, Donald |title=Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe|publisher= Springer|year= 2000|isbn=978-0-387-98701-9}}
</div>


==Suggested reading== == Further reading ==
*Cohen, Jack and Ian Stewart. ''Evolving the Alien: The Science of Extraterrestrial Life,'' Ebury Press, 2002. ISBN 0-091-87927-2 * Cohen, Jack and Ian Stewart. ''Evolving the Alien: The Science of Extraterrestrial Life'', Ebury Press, 2002. {{ISBN|0-09-187927-2}}
* (2021-01-26) Kepler-22b, the Oceanic Exoplanet - "Finding a New Earth", ''NASA''.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Smith |first=Yvette |date=2021-01-26 |title=Finding a New Earth |url=http://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/finding-a-new-earth |access-date=2023-04-13 |website=NASA}}</ref>
*Doyle, Stephen H. ''Habitable Planets for Man,'' American Elsevier Pub. Co, 1970. ISBN 0444000925
* {{cite book |first=Stephen H. |last=Dole |date=1965 |title=Habitable Planets for Man |edition=1st |publisher=Rand Corporation |url=http://www.rand.org/pubs/reports/R414/ |isbn=978-0-444-00092-7 }}
*Grinspoon, David. ''Lonely Planets: The Natural Philosophy of Alien Life,'' HarperCollins, 2004.
* Fogg, Martyn J., ed. "Terraforming" (entire special issue) '']'', April 1991
*Lovelock, James. ''Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth.'' ISBN 0192862189
* Fogg, Martyn J. ''Terraforming: Engineering Planetary Environments'', SAE International, 1995. {{ISBN|1-56091-609-5}}
*Ward, Peter and Donald Brownlee. ''Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe,'' Springer, 2000. ISBN 0387987010
*Gonzalez, Guillermo and Richards, Jay W. ''The Privileged Planet,'' Regnery, 2004. ISBN 0895260654 * Gonzalez, Guillermo and Richards, Jay W. ''The Privileged Planet'', Regnery, 2004. {{ISBN|0-89526-065-4}}
* Grinspoon, David. ''Lonely Planets: The Natural Philosophy of Alien Life'', HarperCollins, 2004.
*Fogg, Martyn J. "A Planet Dweller's Dreams", in ''Islands in the Sky'', Schmidt, Stanley and Robert Zubrin, eds.; Wiley, 1996. ISBN 0-471-13561-5
* Lovelock, James. ''Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth.'' {{ISBN|0-19-286218-9}}
* Schmidt, Stanley and Robert Zubrin, eds. ''Islands in the Sky'', Wiley, 1996. {{ISBN|0-471-13561-5}}
* Webb, Stephen ''If The Universe Is Teeming With Aliens ... Where Is Everybody? Fifty Solutions to the Fermi Paradox and the Problem of Extraterrestrial Life'' New York: January 2002 Springer-Verlag {{ISBN|978-0-387-95501-8}}


==External links== == External links ==
{{Spoken Misplaced Pages|PlanetaryHabitability.ogg|2006-01-22}} {{Spoken Misplaced Pages|PlanetaryHabitability.ogg|date=2006-01-22}}
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Latest revision as of 09:30, 9 January 2025

Known extent to which a planet is suitable for life "Habitable planet" redirects here. For a list of potentially habitable planets found to date, see List of potentially habitable exoplanets.

Understanding planetary habitability is partly an extrapolation of the conditions on Earth, as this is the only planet known to support life.

Planetary habitability is the measure of a planet's or a natural satellite's potential to develop and maintain an environment hospitable to life. Life may be generated directly on a planet or satellite endogenously. Research suggests that life may also be transferred from one body to another, through a hypothetical process known as panspermia. Environments do not need to contain life to be considered habitable nor are accepted habitable zones (HZ) the only areas in which life might arise.

As the existence of life beyond Earth is unknown, planetary habitability is largely an extrapolation of conditions on Earth and the characteristics of the Sun and Solar System which appear favorable to life's flourishing. Of particular interest are those factors that have sustained complex, multicellular organisms on Earth and not just simpler, unicellular creatures. Research and theory in this regard is a component of a number of natural sciences, such as astronomy, planetary science and the emerging discipline of astrobiology.

An absolute requirement for life is an energy source, and the notion of planetary habitability implies that many other geophysical, geochemical, and astrophysical criteria must be met before an astronomical body can support life. In its astrobiology roadmap, NASA has defined the principal habitability criteria as "extended regions of liquid water, conditions favorable for the assembly of complex organic molecules, and energy sources to sustain metabolism". In August 2018, researchers reported that water worlds could support life.

Habitability indicators and biosignatures must be interpreted within a planetary and environmental context. In determining the habitability potential of a body, studies focus on its bulk composition, orbital properties, atmosphere, and potential chemical interactions. Stellar characteristics of importance include mass and luminosity, stable variability, and high metallicity. Rocky, wet terrestrial-type planets and moons with the potential for Earth-like chemistry are a primary focus of astrobiological research, although more speculative habitability theories occasionally examine alternative biochemistries and other types of astronomical bodies.

Background

The idea that planets beyond Earth might host life is an ancient one, though historically it was framed by philosophy as much as physical science. The late 20th century saw two breakthroughs in the field. The observation and robotic spacecraft exploration of other planets and moons within the Solar System has provided critical information on defining habitability criteria and allowed for substantial geophysical comparisons between the Earth and other bodies. The discovery of exoplanets, beginning in the early 1990s and accelerating thereafter, has provided further information for the study of possible extraterrestrial life. These findings confirm that the Sun is not unique among stars in hosting planets and expands the habitability research horizon beyond the Solar System.

While Earth is the only place in the Universe known to harbor life, estimates of habitable zones around other stars, along with the discovery of thousands of exoplanets and new insights into the extreme habitats on Earth where organisms known as extremophiles live, suggest that there may be many more habitable places in the Universe than considered possible until very recently. On 4 November 2013, astronomers reported, based on Kepler space mission data, that there could be as many as 40 billion Earth-sized planets orbiting in the habitable zones of Sun-like stars and red dwarfs within the Milky Way. 11 billion of these estimated planets may be orbiting Sun-like stars. The nearest such planet may be 12 light-years away, according to the scientists. As of June 2021, a total of 59 potentially habitable exoplanets have been found.

Stellar characteristics

An understanding of planetary habitability begins with the host star. The classical habitable zone (HZ) is defined for surface conditions only; but a metabolism that does not depend on the stellar light can still exist outside the HZ, thriving in the interior of the planet where liquid water is available.

Under the auspices of SETI's Project Phoenix, scientists Margaret Turnbull and Jill Tarter developed the "HabCat" (or Catalogue of Habitable Stellar Systems) in 2002. The catalogue was formed by winnowing the nearly 120,000 stars of the larger Hipparcos Catalogue into a core group of 17,000 potentially habitable stars, and the selection criteria that were used provide a good starting point for understanding which astrophysical factors are necessary for habitable planets. According to research published in August 2015, very large galaxies may be more favorable to the formation and development of habitable planets than smaller galaxies, like the Milky Way galaxy.

However, what makes a planet habitable is a much more complex question than having a planet located at the right distance from its host star so that water can be liquid on its surface: various geophysical and geodynamical aspects, the radiation, and the host star's plasma environment can influence the evolution of planets and life, if it originated. Liquid water is a necessary but not sufficient condition for life as we know it, as habitability is a function of a multitude of environmental parameters.

Spectral class

The spectral class of a star indicates its photospheric temperature, which (for main-sequence stars) correlates to overall mass. The appropriate spectral range for habitable stars is considered to be "late F" or "G", to "mid-K". This corresponds to temperatures of a little more than 7,000 K down to a little less than 4,000 K (6,700 °C to 3,700 °C); the Sun, a G2 star at 5,777 K, is well within these bounds. This spectral range probably accounts for between 5% and 10% of stars in the local Milky Way galaxy. "Middle-class" stars of this sort have a number of characteristics considered important to planetary habitability:

  • They live at least a few hundred million years, allowing life a chance to evolve. More luminous main-sequence stars of the "O" classes and many members of the "B" classes usually live less than 500 million years and in exceptional cases less than 10 million.
  • They emit enough high-frequency ultraviolet radiation to trigger important atmospheric dynamics such as ozone formation, but not so much that ionisation destroys incipient life.
  • They emit sufficient radiation at wavelengths conducive to photosynthesis.
  • Liquid water may exist on the surface of planets orbiting them at a distance that does not induce tidal locking.

K-type stars may be able to support life far longer than the Sun.

Whether fainter late K and M class red dwarf stars are also suitable hosts for habitable planets is perhaps the most important open question in the entire field of planetary habitability given their prevalence (habitability of red dwarf systems). Gliese 581 c, a "super-Earth", has been found orbiting in the "habitable zone" (HZ) of a red dwarf and may possess liquid water. However it is also possible that a greenhouse effect may render it too hot to support life, while its neighbor, Gliese 581 d, may be a more likely candidate for habitability. In September 2010, the discovery was announced of another planet, Gliese 581 g, in an orbit between these two planets. However, reviews of the discovery have placed the existence of this planet in doubt, and it is listed as "unconfirmed". In September 2012, the discovery of two planets orbiting Gliese 163 was announced. One of the planets, Gliese 163 c, about 6.9 times the mass of Earth and somewhat hotter, was considered to be within the habitable zone.

A recent study suggests that cooler stars that emit more light in the infrared and near infrared may actually host warmer planets with less ice and incidence of snowball states. These wavelengths are absorbed by their planets' ice and greenhouse gases and remain warmer.

A 2020 study found that about half of Sun-like stars could host rocky, potentially habitable planets. Specifically, they estimated with that, on average, the nearest habitable zone planet around G and K-type stars is about 6 parsecs away, and there are about 4 rocky planets around G and K-type stars within 10 parsecs (32.6 light years) of the Sun.

Stable habitable zone

Main article: Habitable zone

The habitable zone (HZ) is a shell-shaped region of space surrounding a star in which a planet could maintain liquid water on its surface. The concept was first proposed by astrophysicist Su-Shu Huang in 1959, based on climatic constraints imposed by the host star. After an energy source, liquid water is widely considered the most important ingredient for life, considering how integral it is to all life systems on Earth. However, if life is discovered in the absence of water, the definition of an HZ may have to be greatly expanded.

The inner edge of the HZ is the distance where runaway greenhouse effect vaporize the whole water reservoir and, as a second effect, induce the photodissociation of water vapor and the loss of hydrogen to space. The outer edge of the HZ is the distance from the star where a maximum greenhouse effect fails to keep the surface of the planet above the freezing point, and by CO
2(carbon dioxide) condensation.

A "stable" HZ implies two factors. First, the range of an HZ should not vary greatly over time. All stars increase in luminosity as they age, and a given HZ thus migrates outwards, but if this happens too quickly (for example, with a super-massive star) planets may only have a brief window inside the HZ and a correspondingly smaller chance of developing life. Calculating an HZ range and its long-term movement is never straightforward, as negative feedback loops such as the CNO cycle will tend to offset the increases in luminosity. Assumptions made about atmospheric conditions and geology thus have as great an impact on a putative HZ range as does stellar evolution: the proposed parameters of the Sun's HZ, for example, have fluctuated greatly.

Second, no large-mass body such as a gas giant should be present in or relatively close to the HZ, thus disrupting the formation of Earth-size bodies. The matter in the asteroid belt, for example, appears to have been unable to accrete into a planet due to orbital resonances with Jupiter; if the giant had appeared in the region that is now between the orbits of Venus and Mars, Earth would almost certainly not have developed in its present form. However a gas giant inside the HZ might have habitable moons under the right conditions.

Low stellar variation

Main article: Variable star

Changes in luminosity are common to all stars, but the severity of such fluctuations covers a broad range. Most stars are relatively stable, but a significant minority of variable stars often undergo sudden and intense increases in luminosity and consequently in the amount of energy radiated toward bodies in orbit. These stars are considered poor candidates for hosting life-bearing planets, as their unpredictability and energy output changes would negatively impact organisms: living things adapted to a specific temperature range could not survive too great a temperature variation. Further, upswings in luminosity are generally accompanied by massive doses of gamma ray and X-ray radiation which might prove lethal. Atmospheres do mitigate such effects, but their atmosphere might not be retained by planets orbiting variables, because the high-frequency energy buffeting these planets would continually strip them of their protective covering.

The Sun, in this respect as in many others, is relatively benign: the variation between its maximum and minimum energy output is roughly 0.1% over its 11-year solar cycle. There is strong (though not undisputed) evidence that even minor changes in the Sun's luminosity have had significant effects on the Earth's climate well within the historical era: the Little Ice Age of the mid-second millennium, for instance, may have been caused by a relatively long-term decline in the Sun's luminosity. Thus, a star does not have to be a true variable for differences in luminosity to affect habitability. Of known solar analogs, one that closely resembles the Sun is considered to be 18 Scorpii; unfortunately for the prospects of life existing in its proximity, the only significant difference between the two bodies is the amplitude of the solar cycle, which appears to be much greater for 18 Scorpii.

High metallicity

See also: Metallicity

While the bulk of material in any star is hydrogen and helium, there is a significant variation in the amount of heavier elements (metals). A high proportion of metals in a star correlates to the amount of heavy material initially available in the protoplanetary disk. A smaller amount of metal makes the formation of planets much less likely, under the solar nebula theory of planetary system formation. Any planets that did form around a metal-poor star would probably be low in mass, and thus unfavorable for life. Spectroscopic studies of systems where exoplanets have been found to date confirm the relationship between high metal content and planet formation: "Stars with planets, or at least with planets similar to the ones we are finding today, are clearly more metal rich than stars without planetary companions." This relationship between high metallicity and planet formation also means that habitable systems are more likely to be found around stars of younger generations, since stars that formed early in the universe's history have low metal content.

Planetary characteristics

The moons of some gas giants could potentially be habitable.

Habitability indicators and biosignatures must be interpreted within a planetary and environmental context. Whether a planet will emerge as habitable depends on the sequence of events that led to its formation, which could include the production of organic molecules in molecular clouds and protoplanetary disks, delivery of materials during and after planetary accretion, and the orbital location in the planetary system. The chief assumption about habitable planets is that they are terrestrial. Such planets, roughly within one order of magnitude of Earth mass, are primarily composed of silicate rocks, and have not accreted the gaseous outer layers of hydrogen and helium found on gas giants. The possibility that life could evolve in the cloud tops of giant planets has not been decisively ruled out, though it is considered unlikely, as they have no surface and their gravity is enormous. The natural satellites of giant planets, meanwhile, remain valid candidates for hosting life.

In February 2011 the Kepler Space Observatory Mission team released a list of 1235 extrasolar planet candidates, including 54 that may be in the habitable zone. Six of the candidates in this zone are smaller than twice the size of Earth. A more recent study found that one of these candidates (KOI 326.01) is much larger and hotter than first reported. Based on the findings, the Kepler team estimated there to be "at least 50 billion planets in the Milky Way" of which "at least 500 million" are in the habitable zone.

In analyzing which environments are likely to support life, a distinction is usually made between simple, unicellular organisms such as bacteria and archaea and complex metazoans (animals). Unicellularity necessarily precedes multicellularity in any hypothetical tree of life, and where single-celled organisms do emerge there is no assurance that greater complexity will then develop. The planetary characteristics listed below are considered crucial for life generally, but in every case multicellular organisms are more picky than unicellular life.

In August 2021, a new class of habitable planets, named ocean planets, which involves "hot, ocean-covered planets with hydrogen-rich atmospheres", has been reported. Hycean planets may soon be studied for biosignatures by terrestrial telescopes as well as space telescopes, such as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which was launched on 25 December 2021.

Mass and size

Mars, with its rarefied atmosphere, is colder than the Earth would be if it were at a similar distance from the Sun.

Low-mass planets are poor candidates for life for two reasons. First, their lesser gravity makes atmosphere retention difficult. Constituent molecules are more likely to reach escape velocity and be lost to space when buffeted by solar wind or stirred by collision. Planets without a thick atmosphere lack the matter necessary for primal biochemistry, have little insulation and poor heat transfer across their surfaces (for example, Mars, with its thin atmosphere, is colder than the Earth would be if it were at a similar distance from the Sun), and provide less protection against meteoroids and high-frequency radiation. Further, where an atmosphere is less dense than 0.006 Earth atmospheres, water cannot exist in liquid form as the required atmospheric pressure, 4.56 mm Hg (608 Pa) (0.18 inch Hg), does not occur. In addition, a lessened pressure reduces the range of temperatures at which water is liquid.

Secondly, smaller planets have smaller diameters and thus higher surface-to-volume ratios than their larger cousins. Such bodies tend to lose the energy left over from their formation quickly and end up geologically dead, lacking the volcanoes, earthquakes and tectonic activity which supply the surface with life-sustaining material and the atmosphere with temperature moderators like carbon dioxide. Plate tectonics appear particularly crucial, at least on Earth: not only does the process recycle important chemicals and minerals, it also fosters bio-diversity through continent creation and increased environmental complexity and helps create the convective cells necessary to generate Earth's magnetic field. Although geologically active planets with volcanism but no plate tectonics, called Ignan Earths, could also be habitable.

"Low mass" is partly a relative label: the Earth is low mass when compared to the Solar System's gas giants, but it is the largest, by diameter and mass, and the densest of all terrestrial bodies. It is large enough to retain an atmosphere through gravity alone and large enough that its molten core remains a heat engine, driving the diverse geology of the surface (the decay of radioactive elements within a planet's core is the other significant component of planetary heating). Mars, by contrast, is nearly (or perhaps totally) geologically dead and has lost much of its atmosphere. Thus it would be fair to infer that the lower mass limit for habitability lies somewhere between that of Mars and that of Earth or Venus: 0.3 Earth masses has been offered as a rough dividing line for habitable planets. However, a 2008 study by the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics suggests that the dividing line may be higher. Earth may in fact lie on the lower boundary of habitability: if it were any smaller, plate tectonics would be impossible. Venus, which has 85% of Earth's mass, shows no signs of tectonic activity. Conversely, "super-Earths", terrestrial planets with higher masses than Earth, would have higher levels of plate tectonics and thus be firmly placed in the habitable range.

Exceptional circumstances do offer exceptional cases: Jupiter's moon Io (which is smaller than any of the terrestrial planets) is volcanically dynamic because of the gravitational stresses induced by its orbit, and its neighbor Europa may have a liquid ocean or icy slush underneath a frozen shell also due to power generated from orbiting a gas giant.

Saturn's Titan, meanwhile, has an outside chance of harbouring life, as it has retained a thick atmosphere and has liquid methane seas on its surface. Organic-chemical reactions that only require minimum energy are possible in these seas, but whether any living system can be based on such minimal reactions is unclear, and would seem unlikely. These satellites are exceptions, but they prove that mass, as a criterion for habitability, cannot necessarily be considered definitive at this stage of our understanding.

A larger planet is likely to have a more massive atmosphere. A combination of higher escape velocity to retain lighter atoms, and extensive outgassing from enhanced plate tectonics may greatly increase the atmospheric pressure and temperature at the surface compared to Earth. The enhanced greenhouse effect of such a heavy atmosphere would tend to suggest that the habitable zone should be further out from the central star for such massive planets.

Finally, a larger planet is likely to have a large iron core. This allows for a magnetic field to protect the planet from stellar wind and cosmic radiation, which otherwise would tend to strip away planetary atmosphere and to bombard living things with ionized particles. Mass is not the only criterion for producing a magnetic field—as the planet must also rotate fast enough to produce a dynamo effect within its core—but it is a significant component of the process.

The mass of a potentially habitable exoplanet is between 0.1 and 5.0 Earth masses. However it is possible for a habitable world to have a mass as low as 0.0268 Earth Masses. The radius of a potentially habitable exoplanet would range between 0.5 and 1.5 Earth radii.

Orbit and rotation

As with other criteria, stability is the critical consideration in evaluating the effect of orbital and rotational characteristics on planetary habitability. Orbital eccentricity is the difference between a planet's farthest and closest approach to its parent star divided by the sum of said distances. It is a ratio describing the shape of the elliptical orbit. The greater the eccentricity the greater the temperature fluctuation on a planet's surface. Although they are adaptive, living organisms can stand only so much variation, particularly if the fluctuations overlap both the freezing point and boiling point of the planet's main biotic solvent (e.g., water on Earth). If, for example, Earth's oceans were alternately boiling and freezing solid, it is difficult to imagine life as we know it having evolved. The more complex the organism, the greater the temperature sensitivity. The Earth's orbit is almost perfectly circular, with an eccentricity of less than 0.02; other planets in the Solar System (with the exception of Mercury) have eccentricities that are similarly benign.

Habitability is also influenced by the architecture of the planetary system around a star. The evolution and stability of these systems are determined by gravitational dynamics, which drive the orbital evolution of terrestrial planets. Data collected on the orbital eccentricities of extrasolar planets has surprised most researchers: 90% have an orbital eccentricity greater than that found within the Solar System, and the average is fully 0.25. This means that the vast majority of planets have highly eccentric orbits and of these, even if their average distance from their star is deemed to be within the HZ, they nonetheless would be spending only a small portion of their time within the zone.

A planet's movement around its rotational axis must also meet certain criteria if life is to have the opportunity to evolve. A first assumption is that the planet should have moderate seasons. If there is little or no axial tilt (or obliquity) relative to the perpendicular of the ecliptic, seasons will not occur and a main stimulant to biospheric dynamism will disappear. The planet would also be colder than it would be with a significant tilt: when the greatest intensity of radiation is always within a few degrees of the equator, warm weather cannot move poleward and a planet's climate becomes dominated by colder polar weather systems.

If a planet is radically tilted, seasons will be extreme and make it more difficult for a biosphere to achieve homeostasis. The axial tilt of the Earth is higher now (in the Quaternary) than it has been in the past, coinciding with reduced polar ice, warmer temperatures and less seasonal variation. Scientists do not know whether this trend will continue indefinitely with further increases in axial tilt (see Snowball Earth).

The exact effects of these changes can only be computer modelled at present, and studies have shown that even extreme tilts of up to 85 degrees do not absolutely preclude life "provided it does not occupy continental surfaces plagued seasonally by the highest temperature." Not only the mean axial tilt, but also its variation over time must be considered. The Earth's tilt varies between 21.5 and 24.5 degrees over 41,000 years. A more drastic variation, or a much shorter periodicity, would induce climatic effects such as variations in seasonal severity.

Other orbital considerations include:

  • The planet should rotate relatively quickly so that the day-night cycle is not overlong. If a day takes years, the temperature differential between the day and night side will be pronounced, and problems similar to those noted with extreme orbital eccentricity will come to the fore.
  • The planet also should rotate quickly enough so that a magnetic dynamo may be started in its iron core to produce a magnetic field.
  • Change in the direction of the axis rotation (precession) should not be pronounced. In itself, precession need not affect habitability as it changes the direction of the tilt, not its degree. However, precession tends to accentuate variations caused by other orbital deviations; see Milankovitch cycles. Precession on Earth occurs over a 26,000-year cycle.

The Earth's Moon appears to play a crucial role in moderating the Earth's climate by stabilising the axial tilt. It has been suggested that a chaotic tilt may be a "deal-breaker" in terms of habitability—i.e. a satellite the size of the Moon is not only helpful but required to produce stability. This position remains controversial.

In the case of the Earth, the sole Moon is sufficiently massive and orbits so as to significantly contribute to ocean tides, which in turn aids the dynamic churning of Earth's large liquid water oceans. These lunar forces not only help ensure that the oceans do not stagnate, but also play a critical role in Earth's dynamic climate.

Geology

Geological cross section of Earth
A visualization showing a simple model of Earth's magnetic field

Concentrations of radionuclides in rocky planet mantles may be critical for the habitability of Earth-like planets. Such planets with higher abundances likely lack a persistent dynamo for a significant fraction of their lifetimes, and those with lower concentrations may often be geologically inert. Planetary dynamos create strong magnetic fields which may often be necessary for life to develop or persist as they shield planets from solar winds and cosmic radiation. The electromagnetic emission spectra of stars could be used to identify those which are more likely to host habitable Earth-like planets. As of 2020, radionuclides are thought to be produced by rare stellar processes such as neutron star mergers.

Additional geological characteristics may be essential or major factors in the habitability of natural celestial bodies – including some that may shape the body's heat and magnetic field. Some of these are unknown or not well understood and being investigated by planetary scientists, geochemists and others.

Geochemistry

Further information: Geochemistry

It is generally assumed that any extraterrestrial life that might exist will be based on the same fundamental biochemistry as found on Earth, as the four elements most vital for life, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, are also the most common chemically reactive elements in the universe. Indeed, simple biogenic compounds, such as very simple amino acids such as glycine, have been found in meteorites and in the interstellar medium. These four elements together comprise over 96% of Earth's collective biomass. Carbon has an unparalleled ability to bond with itself and to form a massive array of intricate and varied structures, making it an ideal material for the complex mechanisms that form living cells. Hydrogen and oxygen, in the form of water, compose the solvent in which biological processes take place and in which the first reactions occurred that led to life's emergence. The energy released in the formation of powerful covalent bonds between carbon and oxygen, available by oxidizing organic compounds, is the fuel of all complex life-forms. These four elements together make up amino acids, which in turn are the building blocks of proteins, the substance of living tissue. In addition, neither sulfur (required for the building of proteins) nor phosphorus (needed for the formation of DNA, RNA, and the adenosine phosphates essential to metabolism) are rare.

Relative abundance in space does not always mirror differentiated abundance within planets; of the four life elements, for instance, only oxygen is present in any abundance in the Earth's crust. This can be partly explained by the fact that many of these elements, such as hydrogen and nitrogen, along with their simplest and most common compounds, such as carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, methane, ammonia, and water, are gaseous at warm temperatures. In the hot region close to the Sun, these volatile compounds could not have played a significant role in the planets' geological formation. Instead, they were trapped as gases underneath the newly formed crusts, which were largely made of rocky, involatile compounds such as silica (a compound of silicon and oxygen, accounting for oxygen's relative abundance). Outgassing of volatile compounds through the first volcanoes would have contributed to the formation of the planets' atmospheres. The Miller–Urey experiment showed that, with the application of energy, simple inorganic compounds exposed to a primordial atmosphere can react to synthesize amino acids.

Even so, volcanic outgassing could not have accounted for the amount of water in Earth's oceans. The vast majority of the water—and arguably carbon—necessary for life must have come from the outer Solar System, away from the Sun's heat, where it could remain solid. Comets impacting with the Earth in the Solar System's early years would have deposited vast amounts of water, along with the other volatile compounds life requires, onto the early Earth, providing a kick-start to the origin of life.

Thus, while there is reason to suspect that the four "life elements" ought to be readily available elsewhere, a habitable system probably also requires a supply of long-term orbiting bodies to seed inner planets. Without comets there is a possibility that life as we know it would not exist on Earth.

Microenvironments and extremophiles

The Atacama Desert in South America provides an analog to Mars and an ideal environment to study the boundary between sterility and habitability.

One important qualification to habitability criteria is that only a tiny portion of a planet is required to support life, a so-called Goldilocks Edge or Great Prebiotic Spot. Astrobiologists often concern themselves with "micro-environments", noting that "we lack a fundamental understanding of how evolutionary forces, such as mutation, selection, and genetic drift, operate in micro-organisms that act on and respond to changing micro-environments." Extremophiles are Earth organisms that live in niche environments under severe conditions generally considered inimical to life. Usually (although not always) unicellular, extremophiles include acutely alkaliphilic and acidophilic organisms and others that can survive water temperatures above 100 °C in hydrothermal vents.

The discovery of life in extreme conditions has complicated definitions of habitability, but also generated much excitement amongst researchers in greatly broadening the known range of conditions under which life can persist. For example, a planet that might otherwise be unable to support an atmosphere given the solar conditions in its vicinity, might be able to do so within a deep shadowed rift or volcanic cave. Similarly, craterous terrain might offer a refuge for primitive life. The Lawn Hill crater has been studied as an astrobiological analog, with researchers suggesting rapid sediment infill created a protected microenvironment for microbial organisms; similar conditions may have occurred over the geological history of Mars.

Earth environments that cannot support life are still instructive to astrobiologists in defining the limits of what organisms can endure. The heart of the Atacama Desert, generally considered the driest place on Earth, appears unable to support life, and it has been subject to study by NASA and ESA for that reason: it provides a Mars analog and the moisture gradients along its edges are ideal for studying the boundary between sterility and habitability. The Atacama was the subject of study in 2003 that partly replicated experiments from the Viking landings on Mars in the 1970s; no DNA could be recovered from two soil samples, and incubation experiments were also negative for biosignatures.

Ecological factors

The two current ecological approaches for predicting the potential habitability use 19 or 20 environmental factors, with emphasis on water availability, temperature, presence of nutrients, an energy source, and protection from solar ultraviolet and galactic cosmic radiation.

Some habitability factors
Water  · Activity of liquid water
 · Past or future liquid (ice) inventories
 · Salinity, pH, and Eh of available water
Chemical environment Nutrients:
 · C, H, N, O, P, S, essential metals, essential micronutrients
 · Fixed nitrogen
 · Availability/mineralogy
Toxin abundances and lethality:
 · Heavy metals (e.g. Zn, Ni, Cu, Cr, As, Cd, etc.; some are essential, but toxic at high levels)
 · Globally distributed oxidizing soils
Energy for metabolism Solar (surface and near-surface only)
Geochemical (subsurface)
 · Oxidants
 · Reductants
 · Redox gradients
Conducive
physical conditions
 · Temperature
 · Extreme diurnal temperature fluctuations
 · Low pressure (is there a low-pressure threshold for terrestrial anaerobes?)
 · Strong ultraviolet germicidal irradiation
 · Galactic cosmic radiation and solar particle events (long-term accumulated effects)
 · Solar UV-induced volatile oxidants, e.g. O 2, O, H2O2, O3
 · Climate and its variability (geography, seasons, diurnal, and eventually, obliquity variations)
 · Substrate (soil processes, rock microenvironments, dust composition, shielding)
 · High CO2 concentrations in the global atmosphere
 · Transport (aeolian, ground water flow, surface water, glacial)

Classification terminology

The Habitable Exoplanets Catalog uses estimated surface temperature range to classify exoplanets:

  • hypopsychroplanets – very cold (<−50 °C)
  • psychroplanets – cold (<−50 to 0 °C)
  • mesoplanets – medium temperature (0–50 °C; not to be confused with the other definition of mesoplanets)
  • thermoplanets – hot (50–100 °C)
  • hyperthermoplanets – (> 100 °C)

Mesoplanets would be ideal for complex life, whereas hypopsychroplanets and hyperthermoplanets might only support extremophilic life.

The HEC uses the following terms to classify exoplanets in terms of mass, from least to greatest: asteroidan, mercurian, subterran, terran, superterran, neptunian, and jovian.

Alternative star systems

In determining the feasibility of extraterrestrial life, astronomers had long focused their attention on stars like the Sun. However, since planetary systems that resemble the Solar System are proving to be rare, they have begun to explore the possibility that life might form in systems very unlike the Sun's.

It is believed that F, G, K and M-type stars could host habitable exoplanets. About half of the stars similar in temperature to the Sun could have a rocky planet able to support liquid water on its surface, according to research using data from NASA's Kepler Space Telescope.

Binary systems

Main article: Habitability of binary star systems

Typical estimates often suggest that 50% or more of all stellar systems are binary systems. This may be partly sample bias, as massive and bright stars tend to be in binaries and these are most easily observed and catalogued; a more precise analysis has suggested that the more common fainter stars are usually singular, and that up to two thirds of all stellar systems are therefore solitary.

The separation between stars in a binary may range from less than one astronomical unit (AU, the average Earth–Sun distance) to several hundred. In latter instances, the gravitational effects will be negligible on a planet orbiting an otherwise suitable star and habitability potential will not be disrupted unless the orbit is highly eccentric. However, where the separation is significantly less, a stable orbit may be impossible. If a planet's distance to its primary exceeds about one fifth of the closest approach of the other star, orbital stability is not guaranteed. Whether planets might form in binaries at all had long been unclear, given that gravitational forces might interfere with planet formation. Theoretical work by Alan Boss at the Carnegie Institution has shown that gas giants can form around stars in binary systems much as they do around solitary stars.

One study of Alpha Centauri, the nearest star system to the Sun, suggested that binaries need not be discounted in the search for habitable planets. Centauri A and B have an 11 AU distance at closest approach (23 AU mean), and both should have stable habitable zones. A study of long-term orbital stability for simulated planets within the system shows that planets within approximately three AU of either star may remain rather stable (i.e. the semi-major axis deviating by less than 5% during 32 000 binary periods). The continuous habitable zone (CHZ for 4.5 billion years) for Centauri A is conservatively estimated at 1.2 to 1.3 AU and Centauri B at 0.73 to 0.74—well within the stable region in both cases.

Red dwarf systems

Main article: Habitability of red dwarf systems
Relative star sizes and photospheric temperatures. Any planet around a red dwarf such as the one shown here (Gliese 229A) would have to huddle close to achieve Earth-like temperatures, probably inducing tidal locking. See Aurelia. Credit: MPIA/V. Joergens.

M-type stars also considered possible hosts of habitable exoplanets, even those with flares such as Proxima b. Determining the habitability of red dwarf stars could help determine how common life in the universe might be, as red dwarfs make up between 70 and 90% of all the stars in the galaxy. However, it is important to bear in mind that flare stars could greatly reduce the habitability of exoplanets by eroding their atmosphere.

Size

Astronomers for many years ruled out red dwarfs as potential abodes for life. Their small size (from 0.08 to 0.45 solar masses) means that their nuclear reactions proceed exceptionally slowly, and they emit very little light (from 3% of that produced by the Sun to as little as 0.01%). Any planet in orbit around a red dwarf would have to huddle very close to its parent star to attain Earth-like surface temperatures; from 0.3 AU (just inside the orbit of Mercury) for a star like Lacaille 8760, to as little as 0.032 AU for a star like Proxima Centauri (such a world would have a year lasting just 6.3 days). At those distances, the star's gravity would cause tidal locking. One side of the planet would eternally face the star, while the other would always face away from it. The only ways in which potential life could avoid either an inferno or a deep freeze would be if the planet had an atmosphere thick enough to transfer the star's heat from the day side to the night side, or if there was a gas giant in the habitable zone, with a habitable moon, which would be locked to the planet instead of the star, allowing a more even distribution of radiation over the moon. It was long assumed that such a thick atmosphere would prevent sunlight from reaching the surface in the first place, preventing photosynthesis.

An artist's impression of GJ 667 Cc, a potentially habitable planet orbiting a red dwarf constituent in a trinary star system

This pessimism has been tempered by research. Studies by Robert Haberle and Manoj Joshi of NASA's Ames Research Center in California have shown that a planet's atmosphere (assuming it included greenhouse gases CO2 and H2O) need only be 100 millibars (0.10 atm), for the star's heat to be effectively carried to the night side. This is well within the levels required for photosynthesis, though water would still remain frozen on the dark side in some of their models. Martin Heath of Greenwich Community College, has shown that seawater, too, could be effectively circulated without freezing solid if the ocean basins were deep enough to allow free flow beneath the night side's ice cap. Further research—including a consideration of the amount of photosynthetically active radiation—suggested that tidally locked planets in red dwarf systems might at least be habitable for higher plants.

Other factors limiting habitability

Size is not the only factor in making red dwarfs potentially unsuitable for life, however. On a red dwarf planet, photosynthesis on the night side would be impossible, since it would never see the sun. On the day side, because the sun does not rise or set, areas in the shadows of mountains would remain so forever. Photosynthesis as we understand it would be complicated by the fact that a red dwarf produces most of its radiation in the infrared, and on the Earth the process depends on visible light. There are potential positives to this scenario. Numerous terrestrial ecosystems rely on chemosynthesis rather than photosynthesis, for instance, which would be possible in a red dwarf system. A static primary star position removes the need for plants to steer leaves toward the sun, deal with changing shade/sun patterns, or change from photosynthesis to stored energy during night. Because of the lack of a day-night cycle, including the weak light of morning and evening, far more energy would be available at a given radiation level.

Red dwarfs are far more variable and violent than their more stable, larger cousins. Often they are covered in starspots that can dim their emitted light by up to 40% for months at a time, while at other times they emit gigantic flares that can double their brightness in a matter of minutes. Such variation would be very damaging for life, as it would not only destroy any complex organic molecules that could possibly form biological precursors, but also because it would blow off sizeable portions of the planet's atmosphere.

For a planet around a red dwarf star to support life, it would require a rapidly rotating magnetic field to protect it from the flares. A tidally locked planet rotates only very slowly, and so cannot produce a geodynamo at its core. The violent flaring period of a red dwarf's life cycle is estimated to only last roughly the first 1.2 billion years of its existence. If a planet forms far away from a red dwarf so as to avoid tidal locking, and then migrates into the star's habitable zone after this turbulent initial period, it is possible that life may have a chance to develop. However, observations of the 7 to 12-billion year old Barnard's Star showcase that even old red dwarfs can have significant flare activity. Barnard's Star was long assumed to have little activity, but in 1998 astronomers observed an intense stellar flare, showing that it is a flare star.

Longevity and ubiquity

Red dwarfs have one advantage over other stars as abodes for life: far greater longevity. It took 4.5 billion years before humanity appeared on Earth, and life as we know it will see suitable conditions for 1 to 2.3 billion years more. Red dwarfs, by contrast, could live for trillions of years because their nuclear reactions are far slower than those of larger stars, meaning that life would have longer to evolve and survive.

While the likelihood of finding a planet in the habitable zone around any specific red dwarf is slight, the total amount of habitable zone around all red dwarfs combined is equal to the total amount around Sun-like stars given their ubiquity. Furthermore, this total amount of habitable zone will last longer, because red dwarf stars live for hundreds of billions of years or even longer on the main sequence. However, combined with the above disadvantages, it is more likely that red dwarf stars would remain habitable longer to microbes, while the shorter-lived yellow dwarf stars, like the Sun, would remain habitable longer to animals.

Massive stars

Recent research suggests that very large stars, greater than ~100 solar masses, could have planetary systems consisting of hundreds of Mercury-sized planets within the habitable zone. Such systems could also contain brown dwarfs and low-mass stars (~0.1–0.3 solar masses). However the very short lifespans of stars of more than a few solar masses would scarcely allow time for a planet to cool, let alone the time needed for a stable biosphere to develop. Massive stars are thus eliminated as possible abodes for life.

However, a massive-star system could be a progenitor of life in another way – the supernova explosion of the massive star in the central part of the system. This supernova will disperse heavier elements throughout its vicinity, created during the phase when the massive star has moved off of the main sequence, and the systems of the potential low-mass stars (which are still on the main sequence) within the former massive-star system may be enriched with the relatively large supply of the heavy elements so close to a supernova explosion. However, this states nothing about what types of planets would form as a result of the supernova material, or what their habitability potential would be.

Neutron stars

Main article: Habitability of neutron star systems

Post-main sequence stars

Main article: Red giant § Prospects for habitability

Four classes of habitable planets based on water

In a review of the factors which are important for the evolution of habitable Earth-sized planets, Lammer et al. proposed a classification of four water-dependent habitat types:

Class I habitats are planetary bodies on which stellar and geophysical conditions allow liquid water to be available at the surface, along with sunlight, so that complex multicellular organisms may originate.

Class II habitats include bodies which initially enjoy Earth-like conditions, but do not keep their ability to sustain liquid water on their surface due to stellar or geophysical conditions. Mars, and possibly Venus are examples of this class where complex life forms may not develop.

Class III habitats are planetary bodies where liquid water oceans exist below the surface, where they can interact directly with a silicate-rich core.

Such a situation can be expected on water-rich planets located too far from their star to allow surface liquid water, but on which subsurface water is in liquid form because of the geothermal heat. Two examples of such an environment are Europa and Enceladus. In such worlds, not only is light not available as an energy source, but the organic material brought by meteorites (thought to have been necessary to start life in some scenarios) may not easily reach the liquid water. If a planet can only harbor life below its surface, the biosphere would not likely modify the whole planetary environment in an observable way, thus, detecting its presence on an exoplanet would be extremely difficult.

Class IV habitats have liquid water layers between two ice layers, or liquids above ice.

If the water layer is thick enough, water at its base will be in solid phase (ice polymorphs) because of the high pressure. Ganymede and Callisto are likely examples of this class. Their oceans are thought to be enclosed between thick ice layers. In such conditions, the emergence of even simple life forms may be very difficult because the necessary ingredients for life will likely be completely diluted.

The galactic neighborhood

Along with the characteristics of planets and their star systems, the wider galactic environment may also impact habitability. Scientists considered the possibility that particular areas of galaxies (galactic habitable zones) are better suited to life than others; the Solar System, in the Orion Arm, on the Milky Way galaxy's edge is considered to be in a life-favorable spot:

  • It is not in a globular cluster where immense star densities are inimical to life, given excessive radiation and gravitational disturbance. Globular clusters are also primarily composed of older, probably metal-poor, stars. Furthermore, in globular clusters, the great ages of the stars would mean a large amount of stellar evolution by the host or other nearby stars, which due to their proximity may cause extreme harm to life on any planets, provided that they can form.
  • It is not near an active gamma ray source.
  • It is not near the galactic center where once again star densities increase the likelihood of ionizing radiation (e.g., from magnetars and supernovae). The supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies may also prove a danger to any nearby bodies.
  • The circular orbit of the Sun around the galactic center keeps it out of the way of the galaxy's spiral arms where intense radiation and gravitation may again lead to disruption.

Thus, relative isolation is ultimately what a life-bearing system needs. If the Sun were crowded amongst other systems, the chance of being fatally close to dangerous radiation sources would increase significantly. Further, close neighbors might disrupt the stability of various orbiting bodies such as Oort cloud and Kuiper belt objects, which can bring catastrophe if knocked into the inner Solar System.

While stellar crowding proves disadvantageous to habitability, so too does extreme isolation. A star as metal-rich as the Sun would probably not have formed in the very outermost regions of the Milky Way given a decline in the relative abundance of metals and a general lack of star formation. Thus, a "suburban" location, such as the Solar System enjoys, is preferable to a Galaxy's center or farthest reaches.

Other considerations

Alternative biochemistries

Main article: Hypothetical types of biochemistry

While most investigations of extraterrestrial life start with the assumption that advanced life-forms must have similar requirements for life as on Earth, the hypothesis of other types of biochemistry suggests the possibility of lifeforms evolving around a different metabolic mechanism. In Evolving the Alien, biologist Jack Cohen and mathematician Ian Stewart argue astrobiology, based on the Rare Earth hypothesis, is restrictive and unimaginative. They suggest that Earth-like planets may be very rare, but non-carbon-based complex life could possibly emerge in other environments. The most frequently mentioned alternative to carbon is silicon-based life, while ammonia and hydrocarbons are sometimes suggested as alternative solvents to water. The astrobiologist Dirk Schulze-Makuch and other scientists have proposed a Planet Habitability Index whose criteria include "potential for holding a liquid solvent" that is not necessarily restricted to water.

More speculative ideas have focused on bodies altogether different from Earth-like planets. Astronomer Frank Drake, a well-known proponent of the search for extraterrestrial life, imagined life on a neutron star: submicroscopic "nuclear molecules" combining to form creatures with a life cycle millions of times quicker than Earth life. Called "imaginative and tongue-in-cheek", the idea gave rise to science fiction depictions. Carl Sagan, another optimist with regards to extraterrestrial life, considered the possibility of organisms that are always airborne within the high atmosphere of Jupiter in a 1976 paper. Cohen and Stewart also envisioned life in both a solar environment and in the atmosphere of a gas giant.

"Good Jupiters"

"Good Jupiters" are gas giants, like the Solar System's Jupiter, that orbit their stars in circular orbits far enough away from the habitable zone not to disturb it but close enough to "protect" terrestrial planets in closer orbit in two critical ways. First, they help to stabilize the orbits, and thereby the climates of the inner planets. Second, they keep the inner stellar system relatively free of comets and asteroids that could cause devastating impacts. Jupiter orbits the Sun at about five times the distance between the Earth and the Sun. This is the rough distance we should expect to find good Jupiters elsewhere. Jupiter's "caretaker" role was dramatically illustrated in 1994 when Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 impacted the giant.

However, the evidence is not quite so clear. Research has shown that Jupiter's role in determining the rate at which objects hit Earth is significantly more complicated than once thought.

The role of Jupiter in the early history of the Solar System is somewhat better established, and the source of significantly less debate. Early in the Solar System's history, Jupiter is accepted as having played an important role in the hydration of our planet: it increased the eccentricity of asteroid belt orbits and enabled many to cross Earth's orbit and supply the planet with important volatiles such as water and carbon dioxide. Before Earth reached half its present mass, icy bodies from the Jupiter–Saturn region and small bodies from the primordial asteroid belt supplied water to the Earth due to the gravitational scattering of Jupiter and, to a lesser extent, Saturn. Thus, while the gas giants are now helpful protectors, they were once suppliers of critical habitability material.

In contrast, Jupiter-sized bodies that orbit too close to the habitable zone but not in it (as in 47 Ursae Majoris), or have a highly elliptical orbit that crosses the habitable zone (like 16 Cygni B) make it very difficult for an independent Earth-like planet to exist in the system. See the discussion of a stable habitable zone above. However, during the process of migrating into a habitable zone, a Jupiter-size planet may capture a terrestrial planet as a moon. Even if such a planet is initially loosely bound and following a strongly inclined orbit, gravitational interactions with the star can stabilize the new moon into a close, circular orbit that is coplanar with the planet's orbit around the star.

Life's impact on habitability

A supplement to the factors that support life's emergence is the notion that life itself, once formed, becomes a habitability factor in its own right. An important Earth example was the production of molecular oxygen gas (O
2) by ancient cyanobacteria, and eventually photosynthesizing plants, leading to a radical change in the composition of Earth's atmosphere. This environmental change is called the Great Oxidation Event. This oxygen proved fundamental to the respiration of later animal species. The Gaia hypothesis, a scientific model of the geo-biosphere pioneered by James Lovelock in 1975, argues that life as a whole fosters and maintains suitable conditions for itself by helping to create a planetary environment suitable for its continuity. Similarly, David Grinspoon has suggested a "living worlds hypothesis" in which our understanding of what constitutes habitability cannot be separated from life already extant on a planet. Planets that are geologically and meteorologically alive are much more likely to be biologically alive as well and "a planet and its life will co-evolve." This is the basis of Earth system science.

The role of chance

In 2020, a computer simulation of the evolution of planetary climates over 3 billion years suggested that feedback is a necessary but insufficient condition for preventing planets from ever becoming too hot or cold for life. Chance also plays a crucial role. Related considerations include yet unknown factors influencing the thermal habitability of planets such as "feedback mechanism (or mechanisms) that prevents the climate ever wandering to fatal temperatures".

See also

Notes

  1. This article is an analysis of planetary habitability from the perspective of contemporary physical science. A historical viewpoint on the possibility of habitable planets can be found at Beliefs in extraterrestrial life and Cosmic pluralism. For a discussion of the probability of alien life see the Drake equation and Fermi paradox. Habitable planets are also a staple of fiction; see Planets in science fiction.
  2. Life appears to have emerged on Earth approximately 500 million years after the planet's formation. "A" class stars (which shine for between 600 million and 1.2 billion years) and the very latest of the "B" class stars (which shine 10+ million to 600 million) fall within this window. At least theoretically life could emerge in such systems but it would almost certainly not reach a sophisticated level given these time-frames and the fact that increases in luminosity would occur quite rapidly. Life around "O" class stars is exceptionally unlikely, as they shine for less than ten million years.
  3. In Evolving the Alien, Jack Cohen and Ian Stewart evaluate plausible scenarios in which life might form in the cloud-tops of Jovian planets. Similarly, Carl Sagan suggested that the clouds of Jupiter might host life.
  4. There is an emerging consensus that single-celled micro-organisms may in fact be common in the universe, especially since Earth's extremophiles flourish in environments that were once considered hostile to life. The potential occurrence of complex multi-celled life remains much more controversial. In their work Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe, Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee argue that microbial life is probably widespread while complex life is very rare and perhaps even unique to Earth. Current knowledge of Earth's history partly buttresses this theory: multi-celled organisms are believed to have emerged at the time of the Cambrian explosion close to 600 million years ago, but more than 3 billion years after life first appeared. That Earth life remained unicellular for so long underscores that the decisive step toward complex organisms need not necessarily occur.
  5. There is a "mass-gap" in the Solar System between Earth and the two smallest gas giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 13 and 17 Earth masses. This is probably just chance, as there is no geophysical barrier to the formation of intermediate bodies (see for instance OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb and Super-Earth) and we should expect to find planets throughout the galaxy between two and twelve Earth masses. If the star system is otherwise favorable, such planets would be good candidates for life as they would be large enough to remain internally dynamic and to retain an atmosphere for billions of years but not so large as to accrete a gaseous shell which limits the possibility of life formation.
  6. According to prevailing theory, the formation of the Moon commenced when a Mars-sized body struck the Earth in a glancing collision late in its formation, and the ejected material coalesced and fell into orbit (see giant impact hypothesis). In Rare Earth Ward and Brownlee emphasize that such impacts ought to be rare, reducing the probability of other Earth-Moon type systems and hence the probability of other habitable planets. Other moon formation processes are possible, however, and the proposition that a planet may be habitable in the absence of a moon has not been disproven.

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Bibliography

  • Ward, Peter; Brownlee, Donald (2000). Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe. Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-98701-9.

Further reading

  • Cohen, Jack and Ian Stewart. Evolving the Alien: The Science of Extraterrestrial Life, Ebury Press, 2002. ISBN 0-09-187927-2
  • (2021-01-26) Kepler-22b, the Oceanic Exoplanet - "Finding a New Earth", NASA.
  • Dole, Stephen H. (1965). Habitable Planets for Man (1st ed.). Rand Corporation. ISBN 978-0-444-00092-7.
  • Fogg, Martyn J., ed. "Terraforming" (entire special issue) Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, April 1991
  • Fogg, Martyn J. Terraforming: Engineering Planetary Environments, SAE International, 1995. ISBN 1-56091-609-5
  • Gonzalez, Guillermo and Richards, Jay W. The Privileged Planet, Regnery, 2004. ISBN 0-89526-065-4
  • Grinspoon, David. Lonely Planets: The Natural Philosophy of Alien Life, HarperCollins, 2004.
  • Lovelock, James. Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth. ISBN 0-19-286218-9
  • Schmidt, Stanley and Robert Zubrin, eds. Islands in the Sky, Wiley, 1996. ISBN 0-471-13561-5
  • Webb, Stephen If The Universe Is Teeming With Aliens ... Where Is Everybody? Fifty Solutions to the Fermi Paradox and the Problem of Extraterrestrial Life New York: January 2002 Springer-Verlag ISBN 978-0-387-95501-8

External links

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