
New studies dismiss signs of life on distant planet
In April, a team of astronomers announced that they might — just might — have found signs of life on a planet over 120 light-years from Earth. The mere possibility of extraterrestrial life was enough to attract attention worldwide. It also attracted intense scrutiny from other astronomers.
Over the past month, researchers have independently analyzed the data, which suggested that the planet, called K2-18b, has a molecule in its atmosphere that could have been created by living organisms. Three different analyses have all reached the same conclusion: They see no compelling evidence for life on K2-18b.
'The claim just absolutely vanishes,' said Luis Welbanks, an astronomer at Arizona State University and an author of one of the studies.
The debate has less to do with the existence of alien life than with the challenge of observing distant planets. We can see a nearby planet like Jupiter because it reflects enough sunlight to become visible to the naked eye. But a planet like K2-18b is so far away that it becomes invisible not just to the naked eye but to conventional telescopes.
Astronomers have devised a series of increasingly sophisticated tricks to glean information about distant planets. They can measure the wobble of stars and the gravity of planets orbiting them. In 2010, researchers caught a glimpse of GJ 1214b, a planet 48 light-years away, as it passed in front of the star it orbits. When the star's light shone through the planet's atmosphere, certain wavelengths were absorbed, indicating that GJ 1214b might have an atmosphere rich in water vapor.
In 2022, astronomers began using a powerful new tool to peer at distant planets in this way. They pointed the James Webb Space Telescope at faraway solar systems and began detecting exquisitely faint patterns in starlight, clues to the complexity of exoplanet atmospheres.
The following year, Nikku Madhusudhan, an astronomer at the University of Cambridge, and his colleagues zeroed in on K2-18b as it passed in front of its star, using instruments on the Webb telescope that are extremely sensitive to near-infrared light. As K2-18b passed in front of the star, the starlight underwent a subtle shift, caused by a planetary atmosphere containing hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and methane, the researchers concluded.
They also found suggestive hints of a fourth gas, dimethyl sulfide, which could be a very big deal. On Earth, the only source of dimethyl sulfide in the atmosphere is life. Photosynthetic microbes in the ocean produce the molecule as a defense against ultraviolet light from the sun. The molecule escapes their cells and ends up in the air.
But the signal was so faint that it was hard to be certain that it was real. So Madhusudhan's team arranged to look again at K2-18b in 2024. This time, they used a different instrument on the space telescope, which looks at longer wavelengths of mid-infrared light.
In the team's second search, they again found a signature of dimethyl sulfide, this one seemingly even stronger than the first. In April, Madhusudhan and his colleagues described their results in a paper published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. Speaking at a news conference the day before, Madhusudhan said there was only 'a three-in-a-thousand chance of this being a fluke.'
Rafael Luque, an astronomer at the University of Chicago, characterized Madhusudhan as a world expert on exoplanets. 'Madhu has been a pioneer in the field,' he said. 'I have the utmost respect for that team.'
Nevertheless, Luque and his colleagues decided to take a look at the data for themselves.
For their own analysis, the scientists combined all the observations of K2-18b in both the near-infrared and mid-infrared wavelengths. On May 19, they reported that this combined data contained strong signals of hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane, but no clear evidence of dimethyl sulfide.
The critics argue that the new mid-infrared observations were much weaker than those in the near-infrared. On its own, they say, the mid-infrared light could fool researchers with faint noise masquerading as a real signal of dimethyl sulfide.
'I can just say straight up there is no statistically significant signal in the data that was published a month ago,' Jacob Bean said. Bean, an astronomer at the University of Chicago who discovered GJ 1214b's atmosphere, worked with Luque on the May 19 study.
Welbanks, a former student of Madhusudhan's, and his colleagues analyzed the K2-18b data differently. If the mid-infrared signal was genuine, did it have to come from dimethyl sulfide?
The team considered 90 molecules that could plausibly be produced on a planet like K2-18b. Those molecules didn't have to be produced by life, however; chemical reactions driven by sunlight could be enough.
The researchers concluded that the mid-infrared signal might have been produced by 59 of the 90 molecules. The strongest candidate in their analysis was not dimethyl sulfide but propyne, a gas that welders use as fuel.
Welbanks and his colleagues aren't claiming that propyne is present on K2-18b. They simply argue that the faint light from the planet's atmosphere can create ambiguous patterns that might be the result of one of many gases. Such scant data certainly isn't sufficient to consider any planet to be a possible home for life.
On May 15, Madhusudhan and his colleagues responded to Welbanks' team with a study of their own. They examined 650 possible molecules that might be in K2-18b's atmosphere; dimethyl sulfide ended up among the molecules at the top of the list. 'We're exactly where we left off a month ago; it's a good candidate,' Madhusudhan said.
Welbanks said the new study by Madhusudhan simply provided more evidence that dimethyl sulfide does not stand out compared to other possible molecules on K2-18b. 'In effect, this is a self-rebuttal,' he said.
It's possible that the debate over K2-18b could be resolved within months. Last year, Renyu Hu, an astronomer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and his colleagues made more near-infrared observations of the planet. They are now preparing their results. 'It will include substantially more data than previously published,' Hu said.
Bean said the new observations could dispel much of the confusion about K2-18b. 'The science is working,' he said. 'It's going to play out pretty quickly, and I think we'll have some clarity.'
This article originally appeared in
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3 days ago
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New studies dismiss signs of life on distant planet
In April, a team of astronomers announced that they might — just might — have found signs of life on a planet over 120 light-years from Earth. The mere possibility of extraterrestrial life was enough to attract attention worldwide. It also attracted intense scrutiny from other astronomers. Over the past month, researchers have independently analyzed the data, which suggested that the planet, called K2-18b, has a molecule in its atmosphere that could have been created by living organisms. Three different analyses have all reached the same conclusion: They see no compelling evidence for life on K2-18b. 'The claim just absolutely vanishes,' said Luis Welbanks, an astronomer at Arizona State University and an author of one of the studies. The debate has less to do with the existence of alien life than with the challenge of observing distant planets. We can see a nearby planet like Jupiter because it reflects enough sunlight to become visible to the naked eye. But a planet like K2-18b is so far away that it becomes invisible not just to the naked eye but to conventional telescopes. Astronomers have devised a series of increasingly sophisticated tricks to glean information about distant planets. They can measure the wobble of stars and the gravity of planets orbiting them. In 2010, researchers caught a glimpse of GJ 1214b, a planet 48 light-years away, as it passed in front of the star it orbits. When the star's light shone through the planet's atmosphere, certain wavelengths were absorbed, indicating that GJ 1214b might have an atmosphere rich in water vapor. In 2022, astronomers began using a powerful new tool to peer at distant planets in this way. They pointed the James Webb Space Telescope at faraway solar systems and began detecting exquisitely faint patterns in starlight, clues to the complexity of exoplanet atmospheres. The following year, Nikku Madhusudhan, an astronomer at the University of Cambridge, and his colleagues zeroed in on K2-18b as it passed in front of its star, using instruments on the Webb telescope that are extremely sensitive to near-infrared light. As K2-18b passed in front of the star, the starlight underwent a subtle shift, caused by a planetary atmosphere containing hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and methane, the researchers concluded. They also found suggestive hints of a fourth gas, dimethyl sulfide, which could be a very big deal. On Earth, the only source of dimethyl sulfide in the atmosphere is life. Photosynthetic microbes in the ocean produce the molecule as a defense against ultraviolet light from the sun. The molecule escapes their cells and ends up in the air. But the signal was so faint that it was hard to be certain that it was real. So Madhusudhan's team arranged to look again at K2-18b in 2024. This time, they used a different instrument on the space telescope, which looks at longer wavelengths of mid-infrared light. In the team's second search, they again found a signature of dimethyl sulfide, this one seemingly even stronger than the first. In April, Madhusudhan and his colleagues described their results in a paper published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. Speaking at a news conference the day before, Madhusudhan said there was only 'a three-in-a-thousand chance of this being a fluke.' Rafael Luque, an astronomer at the University of Chicago, characterized Madhusudhan as a world expert on exoplanets. 'Madhu has been a pioneer in the field,' he said. 'I have the utmost respect for that team.' Nevertheless, Luque and his colleagues decided to take a look at the data for themselves. For their own analysis, the scientists combined all the observations of K2-18b in both the near-infrared and mid-infrared wavelengths. On May 19, they reported that this combined data contained strong signals of hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane, but no clear evidence of dimethyl sulfide. The critics argue that the new mid-infrared observations were much weaker than those in the near-infrared. On its own, they say, the mid-infrared light could fool researchers with faint noise masquerading as a real signal of dimethyl sulfide. 'I can just say straight up there is no statistically significant signal in the data that was published a month ago,' Jacob Bean said. Bean, an astronomer at the University of Chicago who discovered GJ 1214b's atmosphere, worked with Luque on the May 19 study. Welbanks, a former student of Madhusudhan's, and his colleagues analyzed the K2-18b data differently. If the mid-infrared signal was genuine, did it have to come from dimethyl sulfide? The team considered 90 molecules that could plausibly be produced on a planet like K2-18b. Those molecules didn't have to be produced by life, however; chemical reactions driven by sunlight could be enough. The researchers concluded that the mid-infrared signal might have been produced by 59 of the 90 molecules. The strongest candidate in their analysis was not dimethyl sulfide but propyne, a gas that welders use as fuel. Welbanks and his colleagues aren't claiming that propyne is present on K2-18b. They simply argue that the faint light from the planet's atmosphere can create ambiguous patterns that might be the result of one of many gases. Such scant data certainly isn't sufficient to consider any planet to be a possible home for life. On May 15, Madhusudhan and his colleagues responded to Welbanks' team with a study of their own. They examined 650 possible molecules that might be in K2-18b's atmosphere; dimethyl sulfide ended up among the molecules at the top of the list. 'We're exactly where we left off a month ago; it's a good candidate,' Madhusudhan said. Welbanks said the new study by Madhusudhan simply provided more evidence that dimethyl sulfide does not stand out compared to other possible molecules on K2-18b. 'In effect, this is a self-rebuttal,' he said. It's possible that the debate over K2-18b could be resolved within months. Last year, Renyu Hu, an astronomer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and his colleagues made more near-infrared observations of the planet. They are now preparing their results. 'It will include substantially more data than previously published,' Hu said. Bean said the new observations could dispel much of the confusion about K2-18b. 'The science is working,' he said. 'It's going to play out pretty quickly, and I think we'll have some clarity.' This article originally appeared in


Observer
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Auroras Are Spotted on Neptune for the First Time, and Lead to a New Mystery
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Observer
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Scientists find strongest evidence yet of life on an alien planet
WASHINGTON: In a potential landmark discovery, scientists using the James Webb Space Telescope have obtained what they call the strongest signs yet of possible life beyond our solar system, detecting in an alien planet's atmosphere the chemical fingerprints of gases that on Earth are produced only by biological processes. The two gases - dimethyl sulfide, or DMS, and dimethyl disulfide, or DMDS - involved in Webb's observations of the planet named K2-18b are generated on Earth by living organisms, primarily microbial life such as marine phytoplankton - algae. This suggests the planet may be teeming with microbial life, the researchers said. They stressed, however, that they are not announcing the discovery of actual living organisms but rather a possible biosignature - an indicator of a biological process - and that the findings should be viewed cautiously, with more observations needed. Nonetheless, they voiced excitement. These are the first hints of an alien world that is possibly inhabited, said astrophysicist Nikku Madhusudhan of the University of Cambridge's Institute of Astronomy, lead author of the study published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. "This is a transformational moment in the search for life beyond the solar system, where we have demonstrated that it is possible to detect biosignatures in potentially habitable planets with current facilities. We have entered the era of observational astrobiology," Madhusudhan said. Madhusudhan noted that there are various efforts underway searching for signs of life in our solar system, including various claims of environments that might be conducive to life in places like Mars, Venus and various icy moons. K2-18b is 8.6 times as massive as Earth and has a diameter about 2.6 times as large as our planet. It orbits in the "habitable zone" - a distance where liquid water, a key ingredient for life, can exist on a planetary surface - around a red dwarf star smaller and less luminous than our sun, located about 124 light-years from Earth in the constellation Leo. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, 9.5 trillion km. One other planet also has been identified orbiting this star. About 5,800 planets beyond our solar system, called exoplanets, have been discovered since the 1990s. Scientists have hypothesised the existence of exoplanets called hycean worlds - covered by a liquid water ocean habitable by microorganisms and with a hydrogen-rich atmosphere. Earlier observations by Webb, which was launched in 2021 and became operational in 2022, had identified methane and carbon dioxide in K2-18b's atmosphere, the first time that carbon-based molecules were discovered in the atmosphere of an exoplanet in a star's habitable zone. Sara Seager, a professor of planetary science at MIT, called for patience, pointing to previous claims of water vapour in K2-18b's atmosphere that turned out to be a different gas. And within our solar system, Mars, Venus and moons such as Saturn's Enceladus all have "more chance to be realised as life-hosting," she said. Madhusudhan estimated that it would take just 16 to 24 more hours of Webb's time to confirm their findings, which could happen in the next few years. - AFP