From: Earl Wajenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2002 13:06:22 -0500
Subject: Water in Other Solar Systems

Signs of water found on distant planets

19:00 18 September 02

Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition

Tantalising signs of water have been found in the atmospheres of planets
orbiting distant stars. If the discovery is confirmed, it will fuel
speculation that the Galaxy is teeming with life.

"This would be a historic discovery - the first detection of a prebiotic
molecule in an extrasolar planet," says Cristiano Cosmovici of the
Institute for Cosmic and Planetary Sciences in Rome, whose team made the
discovery.

Cosmovici has looked for water near 17 stars, all of which are thought
to have planetary systems or cometary clouds. His team used the 32-metre
Medicina radio telescope near Bologna to look for water "maser"
emissions. These are telltale microwaves that might come from water in a
planet's atmosphere when it is bathed in the infrared light of its star.

Three of the planetary systems are producing these emissions, Cosmovici
told the Second European Workshop on Exo/Astrobiology in Austria this
week. "This result is astonishing if it's true," says Geoff Marcy, a
leading planet hunter from the University of California at Berkeley.

Shopping list

One of the planetary systems orbits the star Upsilon Andromedae, about
50 light years away. There are three planets in this system, with
minimum masses of about 0.7, 2.1 and 4.6 times the mass of Jupiter. They
are all gas giants like Jupiter, although it is possible that the system
could also contain undetected rocky planets like Earth.

There are also signs of water near two much closer stars: Epsilon
Eridani, a Sun-like star 10 light years away, and Lalande 21185, a red
dwarf about 8 light years away. Between them they may have three planets
with a similar mass to Jupiter, but the evidence is weaker than for
Upsilon Andromedae's planets.

Although having water does not necessarily make a planet habitable, the
result would at least show that one of the key chemicals for life is
common on alien worlds.

"Water's at the top of the shopping list of ingredients for life," says
Hugh Jones of Liverpool John Moores University, whose team announced a
new Jupiter-mass planet this week. "This is a very exciting first step."

Hard life

But these particular planets are unlikely to host life. "These gas
giants presumably have no solid or liquid surface," says Tim Brown of
the High Altitude Observatory in Boulder, Colorado. "Their atmospheres
are probably inimical to life as we know it, and at least some of them
are far too hot to give life a chance."

Nonetheless, water maser emission would allow astronomers to track the
flow of gases in the planets' atmospheres. "This would tell us something
about the winds that operate under the oddball circumstances these
planets create," says Brown.

Everyone agrees that the results need careful checking. For one thing,
says Brown, there is a big question mark over whether Lalande 21185 and
Epsilon Eridani really have planets at all.

Hazel Muir


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