Published 18:10 IST, July 6th 2021

No Exoplanet known to Mankind suitable to sustain life as we know it on Earth: Study

A new study titled "Efficiency of oxygenic photosynthesis on Earth-like planets' has revealed that none of the alien planets known to humans can support life.

Reported by: Kamal Joshi
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Photo Credits: Twitter/@Astronomiyaclub | Image: self
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The space is boundless and eternal. However, can other planets sustain life? A new study has revealed that none of the alien planets known to humans can support life. The scientists focused on understanding the conditions needed for oxygen-based photosynthesis which allows life to flourish. Even though 1000s of planets have been discovered in our own milky way, the planets that are earth-like and in the habitable zone are much less common.

The study

At the moment, only a handful of habitable exoplanets are known to humans. The study published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society revealed that one exoplanet in the studied sample, Kepler-442b came close to receiving stellar radiation needed to sustain life. Kepler-442b is a super-Earth, an exoplanet, orbiting within the habitable zone of K dwarf Kepler-442, around 1,206 light-years from Earth. 

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What is needed to sustain life?

To sustain life, a planet needs an Earth-like biosphere by means of oxygenic photosynthesis which plants use to convert light and carbon dioxide into oxygen and nutrients.

The study evaluated the energy these Earth-like planets acquired from their host star and if it was enough for residing organisms to  “efficiently produce nutrients and molecular oxygen” that are critical for complex life.

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The researchers, by calculating the amount of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) that a planet receives from the host star, discovered that stars that have around half the temperature of our Sun cannot encourage Earth-like biospheres. "Oxygenic photosynthesis would still be possible, but such planets could not sustain a rich biosphere", the study revealed.

Maximum stars in the galaxy are red dwarfs, which are too cool to activate photosynthesis activity on the planets, the study revealed.

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"Since red dwarfs are by far the most common type of star in our galaxy, this result indicates that Earth-like conditions on other planets may be much less common than we might hope," Professor Giovanni Covone of the University of Naples, lead creator of the study, said in a statement. 

"This study puts strong constraints on the parameter space for complex life, so unfortunately it appears that the "sweet spot" for hosting a rich Earth-like biosphere is not so wide," he added.
 

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18:10 IST, July 6th 2021