There would be many habitable Tatooine in the Galaxy

Planets around double stars like Tatooine could be habitable

There are so manystars in our Universe. So many planets too. Looking for traces of extraterrestrial life there is a bit like looking for a needle in a haystack. Except, perhaps, to focus primarily on planets similar to the only planet we know to have allowed life to develop: our Earth. This is why the astronomers search the sky in search ofstars close to the Sun. At least its characteristics. However, half of them are double stars. Does this have an impact on the chances of seeing life develop there?

Possible, tell us today researchers at the University of Copenhagen (Denmark). They have just shown that the planetary systems are formed in a very different way around the double stars. A process that could increase the chances of seeing habitable planets develop there.

As a starting point for this work, there are observations carried out thanks to the Large array of millimeter/submillimeter antennas of the Atacama (Alma, Chile). They show a snapshot of a young double star – it is only about 10,000 years old – surrounded by a disc of gas and dust. The system NGC 1333-IRAS2A is located about 1,000 light years of our Earth. It is made up of two stars separated from each other by about 200 astronomical units. Understand, about 200 times the Earth-Sun distance or more than six times the Sun-Neptune distance.

A larger living area

From these observations, astronomers launched computer simulations which show that the evolution of the disk of gas and dust – the very one which is destined to give rise to exoplanets – is not linear. About every 1,000 years and for ten to a hundred years, it is shaken by movements strong. In parallel, the double star becomes very bright. Ten to a hundred times more than normal. Probably an effect of gravity exerted on each other by the two stars that make up the system. And which, at certain times, causes enormous quantities of matter to fall towards its main star, causing heating and therefore an increase in brightness of the star in question.

These jerks, say the researchers, could influence the structure of the forming planetary system. influence on the chemical composition of the material from which the planets will form. Because these heating phases will trigger the evaporation of the grains of dust and the ice that may surround them. An influence, therefore, on the extent of that which researchers of extraterrestrials know under the name of living area. A region in which water in a liquid state can exist, in particular.

To better understand whether the process can give the ingredients of life a chance to meet in such double star systems, astronomers will need more observational data. They will also need to know if ice-rich comets could bring the building blocks of life to planets ready for it. To respond to this, researchers are still expecting a lot from Alma, but also from the new instruments that will soon be available to them: the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), theEuropean Large Telescope (ELT) or the Square Kilometer Array (SKA). Astronomers will then have a combination of information sources that should yield interesting results.

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