Episode #455 from 39:04

Habitable zones

Habitable zone is an idea that was developed in the 1958 by the Chinese American astronomer, Xu Sheng, and it was a brilliant idea. It said, "Look, I can do the simple calculation. If I take a planet and just stick it at some distance from a star of what's the temperature of the planet? What's the temperature of the surface?" So now, give it a standard Earth-like atmosphere and ask, "Could there be liquid water on the surface?" We believe that liquid water is really important for life. There could be other things that's happening fine, but if you were to start off trying to make life, you'd probably choose water as your solvent for it. So basically, the habitable zone is the band of orbits around a star where you can have liquid water on the surface. You could take a glass of water, pour it on the surface, and it would just pull up. It wouldn't freeze immediately, which would happen if your planet is too far out and it wouldn't just boil away if your planet's too close in. So, that's the formal definition of the habitable zone. So, it's a nice strict definition, there's probably way more going on than that, but this is a place to start.

Why this moment matters

Habitable zone is an idea that was developed in the 1958 by the Chinese American astronomer, Xu Sheng, and it was a brilliant idea. It said, "Look, I can do the simple calculation. If I take a planet and just stick it at some distance from a star of what's the temperature of the planet? What's the temperature of the surface?" So now, give it a standard Earth-like atmosphere and ask, "Could there be liquid water on the surface?" We believe that liquid water is really important for life. There could be other things that's happening fine, but if you were to start off trying to make life, you'd probably choose water as your solvent for it. So basically, the habitable zone is the band of orbits around a star where you can have liquid water on the surface. You could take a glass of water, pour it on the surface, and it would just pull up. It wouldn't freeze immediately, which would happen if your planet is too far out and it wouldn't just boil away if your planet's too close in. So, that's the formal definition of the habitable zone. So, it's a nice strict definition, there's probably way more going on than that, but this is a place to start.

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Habitable zones chapter timestamp | Adam Frank: Alien Civilizations and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life | EpisodeIndex