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Earth: A Borderline Planet For Life?
ScienceDaily (Jan. 14, 2008) - Our planet is changing before our eyes, and as a 
result, many species are living on the edge. Yet Earth has been on the edge of 
habitability from the beginning. New work by astronomers at the 
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics shows that if Earth had been 
slightly smaller and less massive, it would not have plate tectonics - the 
forces that move continents and build mountains. And without plate tectonics, 
life might never have gained a foothold on our world.


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See also: 
Space & Time
  a.. Asteroids, Comets and Meteors
  b.. Extrasolar Planets
  c.. Astrophysics
  d.. Jupiter
  e.. Kuiper Belt
  f.. Pluto
Reference
  a.. Equatorial bulge
  b.. Geomagnetic reversal
  c.. Gas giant
  d.. Volcano
"Plate tectonics are essential to life as we know it," said Diana Valencia of 
Harvard University. "Our calculations show that bigger is better when it comes 
to the habitability of rocky planets."

Plate tectonics involve the movement of huge chunks, or plates, of a planet's 
surface. Plates spread apart from each other, slide under one another, and even 
crash into each other, lifting gigantic mountain ranges like the Himalayas. 
Plate tectonics are powered by magma boiling beneath the surface, much like a 
bubbling pot of chocolate. The chocolate on top cools and forms a skin or 
crust, just as magma cools to form the planet's crust.

Plate tectonics are crucial to a planet's habitability because they enable 
complex chemistry and recycle substances like carbon dioxide, which acts as a 
thermostat and keeps Earth balmy. Carbon dioxide that was locked into rocks is 
released when those rocks melt, returning to the atmosphere from volcanoes and 
oceanic ridges.

"Recycling is important even on a planetary scale," Valencia explained.

Valencia and her colleagues, Richard O'Connell and Dimitar Sasselov (Harvard 
University), examined the extremes to determine whether plate tectonics would 
be more or less likely on different-sized rocky worlds. In particular, they 
studied so-called "super-Earths"-planets more than twice the size of Earth and 
up to 10 times as massive. (Any larger, and the planet would gather gas as it 
forms, becoming like Neptune or even Jupiter.)

The team found that super-Earths would be more geologically active than our 
planet, experiencing more vigorous plate tectonics due to thinner plates under 
more stress. Earth itself was found to be a borderline case, not surprisingly 
since the slightly smaller planet Venus is tectonically inactive.

"It might not be a coincidence that Earth is the largest rocky planet in our 
solar system, and also the only one with life," said Valencia.

Exoplanet searches have turned up five super-Earths already, although none have 
life-friendly temperatures. If super-Earths are as common as observations 
suggest, then it is inevitable that some will enjoy Earth-like orbits, making 
them excellent havens for life.

"There are not only more potentially habitable planets, but MANY more," stated 
Sasselov, who is director of the Harvard Origins of Life Initiative.

In fact, a super-Earth could prove to be a popular vacation destination to our 
far-future descendants. Volcanic "rings of fire" could span the globe while the 
equivalent of Yellowstone Park would bubble with hot springs and burst with 
hundreds of geysers. Even better, an Earth-like atmosphere would be possible, 
while the surface gravity would be up to three times that of Earth on the 
biggest super-Earths.

"If a human were to visit a super-Earth, they might experience a bit more back 
pain, but it would be worth it to visit such a great tourist spot," Sasselov 
suggested with a laugh.

He added that although a super-Earth would be twice the size of our home 
planet, it would have similar geography. Rapid plate tectonics would provide 
less time for mountains and ocean trenches to form before the surface was 
recycled, yielding mountains no taller and trenches no deeper than those on 
Earth. Even the weather might be comparable for a world in an Earth-like orbit.

"The landscape would be familiar. A super-Earth would feel very much like 
home," said Sasselov.

Headquartered in Cambridge, Mass., the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for 
Astrophysics (CfA) is a joint collaboration between the Smithsonian 
Astrophysical Observatory and the Harvard College Observatory. CfA scientists, 
organized into six research divisions, study the origin, evolution and ultimate 
fate of the universe.

This research was the subject of a press conference at the 211th meeting of the 
American Astronomical Society.

Adapted from materials provided by Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

www.sciencedaily.com



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