... habitability may involve more than just being the right distance from the host star to have liquid water.” The data gathered about the flare brings further bad news when it comes to comparing the Proxima...
... at least. To account for this anomaly, Glein and Waite suggest the lack of CO is the result of chemical modification by liquid water, and that the missing CO could be hidden away in a subsurface ocean. It would not be the first time though...
... habitable zone of their parent stars. This ‘Goldilocks zone’ as it has become known, is within a region where liquid water - a vital ingredient to life as we know it - might be free to contribute to rivers or oceans on the planet surface. Although...
The next holy grail in exoplanet detection, beyond finding an Earth 2.0 complete with liquid water and a substantial and non-toxic atmosphere, is undoubtedly to find the first confirmed exomoon. So, when news spread ...
..., which future studies could help determine, “it could trap enough heat to warm the planet and allow liquid water on its surface,” said co-author Diana Kossakowski at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany. Wasting...
...for 'life as we know it' on nearby stars - in particular those known to host planets with the potential for liquid water on their surfaces. “The expanded search capabilities that Breakthrough Listen has made possible allow us to consider a much ...