Customs Today
  • Home
  • Islamabad
  • Karachi
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
Customs Today
  • Home
  • Islamabad
  • Karachi
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
Customs Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Science & Technology Science

Earth-like planets orbiting close to small stars

byCustoms Today Report
02/10/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

You might also like

Tesla driverless system to use updated radar technology

12/09/2016

Apple to develop its own self-driving technology

10/09/2016

WASHINGTON: Earth-like planets orbiting close to small stars may have magnetic fields that protect them from stellar radiation and help maintain surface conditions that could be conducive to life, scientists say.
A planet’s magnetic field emanates from its core and is thought to deflect the charged particles of the stellar wind, protecting the atmosphere from being lost to space.
Magnetic fields, born from the cooling of a planet’s interior, could also protect life on the surface from harmful radiation, as Earth’s magnetic field protects us.
Low-mass stars are among the most common in the universe. Planets orbiting near such stars are easier for astronomers to target for study because when they transit, or pass in front of, their host star, they block a larger fraction of the light than if they transited a more massive star.
But because such a star is small and dim, its habitable zone – where an orbiting planet gets the heat necessary to maintain life-friendly liquid water on the surface – also lies relatively close in.
A planet so close to its star is subject to the star’s powerful gravitational pull, which could cause it to become tidally locked, with the same side forever facing its host star, as the Moon is with Earth.
That same gravitational tug from the star also creates tidally generated heat inside the planet, or tidal heating. Tidal heating is responsible for driving the most volcanically active body in our solar system, Jupiter’s moon Io.
In a paper published in the journal Astrobiology, lead author Peter Driscoll sought to determine the fate of such worlds across time.
The research combined models of orbital interactions and heating by Rory Barnes, assistant professor of astronomy, with those of thermal evolution of planetary interiors done by Driscoll, who began this work as a University of Washington postdoctoral fellow and is now a geophysicist at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, DC.

Related Stories

Tesla driverless system to use updated radar technology

byCT Report
12/09/2016

WASHINGTON: Electric carmaker Tesla announced Sunday it was upgrading its Autopilot software to use more advanced radar technology. In a...

Apple to develop its own self-driving technology

byCT Report
10/09/2016

SAN FRANCISCO: Apple may not become an automaker, but it still wants to develop its own self-driving technology. The iPhone-maker's...

NASA spots slowest known magnetar

byCT Report
10/09/2016

WASHINGTON: Astronomers have found evidence of a magnetar - magnetised neutron star - that spins much slower than the slowest...

‘YouTubers’ outshining old-school television

byCT Report
09/08/2016

SAN FRANCISCO: A media revolution is taking place, and most people over 35 years of age aren’t tuned in. Millennial...

Next Post

Flowing water on red planet

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

© 2011 Customs Today -World's first newspaper on customs. Customs Today.

No Result
View All Result
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Latest News
  • Karachi
  • Islamabad
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
  • About Us

© 2011 Customs Today -World's first newspaper on customs. Customs Today.