NASA spotted a snake-like exoplanet that shed and regrew its own atmosphere
I love the smell of methane in the morning…
This inhospitable world orbits its parent star, a red dwarf, once every 38 hours, at a distance roughly 70 times closer than the space between the Earth and Sun.
The atmosphere seen on GJ 1132 b today is a noxious blend of hydrogen, hydrogen cyanide,methane, and an aerosol haze similar to smog here on Earth. Hydrogen cyanide, sometimes called prussic acid, smells like bitter almonds and is highly toxic.
Data from Hubble, combined with computer modeling produces a likely history for this unwelcoming world. When the planet still retained its initial atmosphere, vast quantities of hydrogen were stored within the crust of the world. Following the loss of its gaseous cover, these reserves are now being released from underground throughvolcanic activity.
“Then the star cools down and the planet’s just sitting there. So you’ve got this mechanism where you can cook off the atmosphere in the first 100 million years, and then things settle down. And if you can regenerate the atmosphere, maybe you can keep it,” explainsMark Swainof Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).
A look at what we know — so far — about the exoplanet GJ 1132 b. (Video credit: NASA Goddard)
This exoplanet is tidally locked to its parent star, meaning one hemisphere of GJ 1132 b is constantly faced toward its sun, in the same side the Moon always faces Earth.
The orbit GJ 1132 b takes around its star is highly elliptical, with significant differences between their closest and most-distant approaches. Gravitational forces flex the planet, producing heat, driving volcanoes, and the release of hydrogen from beneath the world, research suggests. A similar process is seen in our own solar system, asJupiter’s moon Ioundergoes gravitational interactions with the King of the Planets as well as its neighboring moons.
However, the crust of GJ 1132 b is thought to be extremely thin — only around 100 meters (a few hundred feet) thick. This would not support massive volcanoes as we see on Earth. Instead, magma would flow upward through a crust broken like a cracked hard-boiled egg.
TheJames Webb Space Telescope, due for launch on Halloween, may be able to spy beneath the clouds of GJ 1132 b, providing astronomers a first-hand look at geology on this hellish planet.
Story byThe Cosmic Companion
Exploring the wonders of the Cosmos, one mystery at a time.Exploring the wonders of the Cosmos, one mystery at a time.
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