HABITABLE ZONES AROUND MAIN-SEQUENCE STARS: DEPENDENCE ON PLANETARY MASS
Pennsylvania State University · NASA Astrobiology Institute · +5 more institutions
Abstract
The ongoing discoveries of extrasolar planets are unveiling a wide range of terrestrial mass (size) planets around their host stars. In this letter, we present estimates of habitable zones (HZs) around stars with stellar effective temperatures in the range 2600 K - 7200 K, for planetary masses between 0.1 ME and 5 ME. Assuming H2O (inner HZ) and CO2 (outer HZ) dominated atmospheres, and scaling the background N2 atmospheric pressure with the radius of the planet, our results indicate that larger planets have wider HZs than do smaller ones. Specifically, with the assumption that smaller planets will have less dense atmospheres, the inner edge of the HZ (runaway greenhouse limit) moves outward (~10% lower than…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 52
Authors
6- RKRavi KopparapuCorresponding
Pennsylvania State University, NASA Astrobiology Institute, Blue Marble Space, Blue Marble Space Institute of Science
- RMRamses M. Ramírez
Pennsylvania State University, NASA Astrobiology Institute
- JCJ. C. Schottelkotte
Pennsylvania State University
- JFJames F. Kasting
Pennsylvania State University, NASA Astrobiology Institute
- SDShawn Domagal‐Goldman
Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA Astrobiology Institute
Topics & keywords
- Stars
- Astrobiology
- Main sequence
- Astronomy
- Physics
- Circumstellar habitable zone
- Sequence (biology)
- Geology