Which of Earth's features were essential for the origin and sustenance of life? And how do scientists identify those features on other worlds?
A team of Carnegie investigators with array of expertise ranging from geochemistry to planetary science to astronomy published this week an essay in Science urging the research community to recognize the vital importance of a planet's interior dynamics in creating an environment that's hospitable for life.
With our existing capabilities, observing an exoplanet's atmospheric composition will be the first way to search for signatures of life elsewhere. However, Carnegie's Anat Shahar, Peter Driscoll, Alycia Weinberger, and George Cody argue that a true picture of planetary habitability must consider how a planet's atmosphere is linked to and shaped by what's happening in its interior.
For example, on Earth, plate tectonics are crucial for maintaining a surface climate where life can thrive. What's more, without the cycling of material between its surface and interior, the convection that drives the Earth's magnetic field would not be possible and without a magnetic field, we would be bombarded by cosmic radiation.
Source: WHEN IT COMES TO PLANETARY HABITABILITY, IT'S WHAT'S INSIDE THAT COUNTS
Also Covered By: What makes a planet habitable
Basically, it is what is inside that counts — I've heard this numerous times from various teachers in school. This seems to be true for planets as well.
[See also: the Drake Equation, abiogenesis, anthropic bias, and the Fermi Paradox. --Ed.]
(Score: 2) by krishnoid on Friday May 03 2019, @06:21AM
No less than three boutiques, two country clubs, two open-air bars, two polo pitches ... am I missing anything (aside from the obvious opera house, et al.)?
I'm sorry, in that event, what do you mean by 'habitable'?