The Search for extrasolar Earth - like planets

May, 2003
10 pages
Published in:
  • Earth Planet.Sci.Lett. 208 (2003) 113-124
e-Print:

Citations per year

20052006200720082009102
Abstract: (arXiv)
The search for extrasolar Earth-like planets is underway. Over 100 extrasolar giant planets are known to orbit nearby sun-like stars, including several in multiple-planet systems. These planetary systems are stepping stones for the search for Earth-like planets: the technology development, observational strategies, and science results can all be applied to Earth-like planets. Stars much less massive than the sun the most common stars in our Galaxy are being monitored for the gravitational influence of Earth-like planets. Although Earth-like planets orbiting sun-like stars are much more difficult to detect, space missions are being built to detect them indirectly due to their effects on the parent star and to quantify fundamental factors such as terrestrial planet frequency, size distribution, and mass distribution. Extremely ambitious space programs are being developed to directly detect Earth-like planets orbiting sun-like stars, and must tackle the immense technological challenge of blocking out the light of the parent star, which is brighter than the planet by six to ten orders of magnitude. Direct detection of radiation from the planet is necessary for the definitive goal of the search for Earth-like planets: the study of atmospheric spectral signatures for signs of severe disequilibrium chemistry that could be indicative of biological activity. In addition to technological development, a growing flurry of scientific activity has begun to: understand terrestrial planet formation and terrestrial planet frequency: model terrestrial-like planet atmospheres and evolution: articulate the biological signatures of our own Earth: and even to study Earth as an extrasolar planet by observation and analysis of the spatially unresolved Earth.
  • exobiology 23 A physical basis for life detection experiments D. J. Des Marais, M. Harwit, K. Jucks, J. Kasting, D. Lin, J. Lunine, J. Schneider, S. Seager, W. Traub and N. Woolf. 24 Remote sensing of planetary properties and biosignatures on extrasolar terrestrial planets F. Selsis, D. Despois, J.-P. Parisot. 25 Signature of life on exoplanets: can Darwin produce false positive detections? N.J. Woolf, P.S. Smith, W.A. Traub, K.W. Jucks.. 26 The spectrum of earthshine: a pale blue dot observed from the ground L. Arnold, S. Gillet, O. Lardière, P. Riaud, J. Schneider. 27 A test for the search for life on extrasolar planets: Looking for the terrestrial vegetation signature in the Earthshine spectrum S. Bains, R.M. Corfield, R.D. Norris. 28 Mechanisms of climate warming at the end of the Paleocene V.S. Meadows et al.. 29 The virtual planetary laboratory: towards characterizing extrasolar terrestrial planets, AAS DPS meeting #33, #40.12
    • J.E. Lovelock
      • Nature 207 (1965) 9
  • Res. Lett, 28 (2001) 1671-1674. 34 Search for life on Earth from the Galileo spacecraft J.C. Pearl, P.R. Christensen. 35 Initial data from the Mars Global Surveyor thermal emission spectrometer experiment: Observations of the Earth G.R. Davis, S.B. Calcutt, J.R. Drummond, D.A. Naylor, A.J. Penny, S. Seager. 36 Measurements of the Unresolved Spectrum of Earth (MUSE), Final Report of the Concept Study for the Canadian Space Agency Space Science Program, April 2002. 37 38 S. Kilston 39 THE PROJECT: an Observatory / Transport Spaceship for Discovering and Populating Habitable Extrasolar Terrestrial Planets Sara Seager is a research staff me mber at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, located in Washington, DC. Her theoretical work focuses on modeling extrasolar planet atmospheres to predict observational signatures and to interpret data. She is also co-leading a search for extrasolar transiting planets. Seager received a Ph.D. in astronomy from Harvard University in 1999 and then spent three years at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ as a long-term member. She has been at the Carnegie Institution of Washington since August
    • C. Sagan
      ,
    • W.R. Thompson
      ,
    • R. Carlson
      ,
    • D. Gurnett
      ,
    • C.A. Hord