Exploring Alien Worlds With NASA’s Webb Space Telescope: TRAPPIST-1 System

TRAPPIST-1 Webb Space Telescope

During its first operating cycle, the James Webb Space Telescope will set its sights on the TRAPPIST-1 system, an incredible collection of seven rocky exoplanets 41 light years away from Earth.

Astrobiologists like Dr. Giada Arney from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center are excited about this system because TRAPPIST-1 is a perfect laboratory for studying habitability! It consists of seven rocky planets, distributed across the system’s habitable zone, or the area around a star where it is not too hot and not too cold for liquid water to exist on the surface of surrounding planets. Webb will characterize the atmospheres of these planets and help scientists learn more about planetary formation and habitability.

See Part 1 in this video series.

Video Transcript:

Well, TRAPPIST-1 is a really exciting system for James Webb to observe. It’s going to observe TRAPPIST-1 early in its operating cycle.

And the reason why astronomers are so excited by TRAPPIST-1 is that it’s a system of seven, you know, not just one or two, but seven rocky planets orbiting a really low mass star.

This is really, really interesting because these planets sort of are a natural laboratory to study processes that might impact planetary habitability. And the reason for that is because some of the planets in that system are too close to the star to be habitable. They’re probably too hot.

Some of the planets in that system are just the right distance from their star to possibly be habitable. And then at least one of the planets in the system is probably too cold to be habitable. If I were to guess, I would probably guess that it’s cold and frozen over.

So by studying all the planets in the system and comparing and contrasting their characteristics, we might learn more about how planetary habitability varies as you move out or inward from your distance from your parent star, and also about the different processes that can enable or maybe destroy habitability at different distances from your star.

That’s really, really exciting.

And all of these planets are orbiting the same star.

So we know they’re all formed together; they’re all from the same material; they all experience the same processes from the star over their lifetime.

So, it’s a really, really nice system to use for this kind of comparison.

And of course, we also want to search for biosignatures in the atmospheres of the potentially habitable TRAPPIST-1 planets. And if we find things that’ll be really, really interesting because these low mass stars like TRAPPIST-1 are, they’re very different from our massive Sun-like stars.

These low mass stars tend to be… they’re really, really active. They produce a lot of high energy stellar flares. They produce a lot of high-energy radiation.

So, whatever evolutionary history these planets have had over time, it’s probably pretty different from the planets of our solar system just because its star behaves so differently.

And so, it’ll also be really, really interesting to compare the planets in the system to the rocky planets in our solar system and see, you know, in what ways are these planets different, but also in what ways are they the same?

6 Comments on "Exploring Alien Worlds With NASA’s Webb Space Telescope: TRAPPIST-1 System"

  1. David W Edwards | March 7, 2022 at 10:26 pm | Reply

    That’s really, really interesting!

  2. “Early on”? What does that mean? Tomorrow or 2036?

  3. “really, really” Is that the next over-used catch phrase that will come into vogue when the hipsters get tired of saying ‘like’ in every sentence?

  4. Really, really exciting! Really, really!

  5. Sweet, can’t wait, subscribing now

  6. james r carter | July 15, 2022 at 11:28 am | Reply

    I am looking forward to James Webb telescope viewing the trappist system. It may discovered life

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