Recently, scientists from Cambridge found for the first time CO2 and methane in the atmosphere of a habitable zone exoplanet, in addition to possible evidence of another molecule that could be indicative of life. In a conversation with DH, Professor Nikku Madhusudhan, lead author of the study, explains the science behind exoplanet remote-sensing and the search for alien life.
Typical ways of detecting exoplanets include measuring the dimming of a star when a planet passes in front of it, observing whether a planet could be causing the light of the star to Doppler shift, or through a method known as gravitational lensing.
An artist's impression of 51 Pegasi b, also called Dimidium, the first exoplanet discovered orbiting a star like our sun.
Credit: NASA
An image showing the atmosphere composition of K2-18 b.
Credit: NASA
The main implication, which we actually stand by in our paper, is that the detection of CH4 and CO2 in a Hydrogen-rich atmosphere without the detection of ammonia… that combination, based on all we know about atmospheric chemistry, can be explained by the presence of a liquid water ocean, and that is what we would call a Hycean world.
Prof Madhusudhan, lead study author
An artist's impression of the Hycean world K2-18 b.
Credit: NASA
Could the confirmation of DMS, along with liquid water, indicate the possibility of life on K2-18 b?
“That is tricky, but it would be a very good first step—even saying ‘some indication of DMS is there’ has never happened before in the history of our species and we’re doing this for the first time so that’s a huge step already. Say, if we confirm the presence of DMS tomorrow, it would be even one step closer,” the professor said.
“If we look at 100 habitable planets in the next decade or so and never find life, that would be a major result in itself, [indicating the relative] uniqueness of life. Because just from the number of planets that are out there and the diversity in nature that we’re seeing, and all other aspects, atmospheric properties and so on, it’s very difficult to imagine that there’s no life out there,” the professor said.