On the heels of a successful launch on June 26, NASA is set to launch two more sounding rockets from northern Australia during the first half of July. These missions will help astronomers understand how starlight influences a planet’s atmosphere, possibly making or breaking its ability to support life as we know it.
The two missions will look at Alpha
Centauri A and B – two Sun-like stars near our own – in extreme- and
far-ultraviolet light. Ultraviolet light, which has wavelengths shorter than
the light that is visible to the human eye, is a critical factor in the search
for life. A little bit of ultraviolet light can help form the molecules
necessary for life, but too much can erode an atmosphere, leaving behind an
inhospitable planet.
The
closest star system to Earth is the famous Alpha Centauri group. At a distance
of 4.3 light-years, this system is made up of the binary formed by the stars
Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B, plus the faint red dwarf Alpha Centauri
C, also known as Proxima Centauri. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has given us
this stunning view of the bright Alpha Centauri A (on the left) and Alpha
Centauri B (on the right). Credits: ESA/NASA
“Ultraviolet radiation from the Sun played
a role in how Mars lost its atmosphere and how Venus turned into a dry, barren
landscape,” said Brian Fleming, astronomer at the University of Colorado,
Boulder, and principal investigator for one of the missions, the Dual-channel
Extreme Ultraviolet Continuum Experiment, or DEUCE. “Understanding ultraviolet
radiation is extremely important to understanding what makes a planet
habitable.”
Of the over 5,000 exoplanets known
throughout across the galaxy, only Earth is known to host life. In the search
for other exoplanets that could host life as we know it, astronomers have
focused on planets that orbit in the habitable zone – defined as the distances
from a star where a planet’s surface temperature could support water.
“But that’s a rudimentary way of
characterizing habitability,” Fleming said.
While water is one part of making a planet
hospitable, for a planet to support an Earth-like biosphere, it also needs an
atmosphere. If the habitable zone is bathed in too much ultraviolet radiation,
any water vapor in the upper atmosphere could escape, quickly drying out the
planet. Atmospheres can also be eroded by radiation and extreme flares from a
planet’s host star, exposing the surface to harsh ultraviolet radiation, which
can break apart molecules like DNA.
But just how much ultraviolet radiation is
emitted by different types of stars is poorly known. Without accurate
knowledge, astronomers can’t accurately predict which planets might host life.
“We need to understand the stars so that
we can understand any planets we find there,” said Kevin France, astronomer at
the University of Colorado, Boulder, and principal investigator for the
Suborbital Imaging Spectrograph for Transition region Irradiance from Nearby
Exoplanet host stars, or SISTINE, mission.
The
Spectrograph for Transition region Irradiance from Nearby Exoplanet host stars,
or SISTINE, payload is being prepared for launch. Credits: NASA Wallops
DEUCE and SISTINE
will take these important measurements of ultraviolet light to help narrow the
search for habitable planets. Launching only a week apart, the two missions
will work together to get a full picture of the ultraviolet light coming from
Alpha Centauri A and B.
The researchers selected Alpha Centauri A
and B because they can serve as a useful reference against which to calibrate
observations from the Sun – the only other star for which we have complete
ultraviolet measurements. Ultraviolet light is absorbed by dust and gas in
space. This makes it nearly impossible to measure ultraviolet light from more
distant stars at the level needed for these types of analyses. The Alpha
Centauri system, however, is just 4.3 light-years away, close enough that much
of its ultraviolet light reaches us before being absorbed.
Ultraviolet light is also mostly blocked
by Earth’s atmosphere, so researchers have to send instruments into space to
measure it. Since the full range of ultraviolet light can’t be measured with a
single instrument, DEUCE will measure the shorter, extreme-ultraviolet
wavelengths and SISTINE will measure the longer, far-ultraviolet wavelengths.
The wavelength coverages will slightly overlap so that the collected data can
be calibrated and used as one dataset. This information will then be used to
create models that can help astronomers assess which other star systems could
support habitable environments.
“Looking at Alpha Centauri will help us
check if other stars like the Sun have the same radiation environment or if
there are a range of environments,” France said. “We have to go to Australia to
study it because we can’t easily see these stars from the northern hemisphere
to measure them.”
SISTINE is scheduled for launch July 4 and
DEUCE on July 12.
The two missions, aboard NASA two-stage
Black Brant IX sounding rockets, will launch from the Arnhem Space Center in
East Arnhem Land in Australia’s Northern Territory. The Arnhem Space Center is
owned and operated by Equatorial Launch Australia, or ELA, on the land of the
Yolngu, the Traditional Custodians and Landowners.
Along with a third mission, the X-ray Quantum Calorimeter, or XQC, which flew June 26, these scientific studies can only be conducted from the southern hemisphere.
Source: NASA Rockets Launch from Australia
to Seek Habitable Star Conditions | NASA
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