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This Volcano-Covered Planet May Be Habitable to Alien Life

On a glance, LP 791-18 d probably seems like a violent place to live. If new findings from NASA researchers hold up, the Earth-sized exoplanet orbiting a star 90 light-years away from us is teeming with active volcanoes, all over its surface. Interesting geology, sureā€”but clearly this is no place suitable for life to thrive, right?

Well, donā€™t be so sure. LP 791-18 d, whose discovery was announced in a new study published Wednesday in Nature, might not be a cozy place most for most of us, but the exoplanet, which orbits a small red dwarf star in the southern constellation Crater, may be more habitable than we think. And much of that may actually be due to the fact that itā€™s covered hundreds of volcanoes.

LP 791-18 d was found by NASAā€™s TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) and the recently retired Spitzer Space Telescope, in combination with data acquired by ground-based observatories around the world. The new paper shows that the planet is probably undergoing the same kind of volcanic outbursts that dot Jupiterā€™s moon Io, the most volcanically active body in the solar system.

The planet is tidally locked, which means the same side is constantly facing the star itā€™s orbiting. One side of the planet is in perpetual daytime, while the other only knows the night. The day side is probably blisteringly hotā€”and liquid water probably canā€™t condense onto the surface.

But crucially, the volcanic activity that dots the planet means that LP 791-18 d could help build an atmosphere for the entire planet. An atmosphere could help water condense on the night side of the planet. And that means that life of some kindā€”probably microbialā€”could perhaps evolve and sustain itself. LP 791-18 d sits precisely in a distance from the star where liquid water could theoretically pool up on a planet.

To be clear, the volcanoes on the planet have not been confirmed, but there is some pretty good reason to believe they exist. LP 791-18 d actually has two sibling planets that also orbit the same star. One of these planets in particular passes close to LP 791-18 d and gravitationally tugs on it, causing slight geological deformations each time. Those deformations are enough to generate internal friction that heat up the planetā€™s interior and for volcanic activity to burst out of the surface. Itā€™s the same dynamic that explains why Ioā€™s active volcanoes exist.

More work will be needed to confirm what LP 791-18 d really looks like (and hopefully it also gets a name thatā€™s easier to say out loud), but if the findings hold true, it could jump up as one of the most compelling exoplanet discoveries in recent memory.

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