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Kepler Telescope Spies Details of TRAPPIST-1 System’s Outermost Planet

By Peter Kelley | University of Washington on May 23, 2017   Featured, Science/Education  

Kepler Telescope Spies Details of TRAPPIST-1 System’s Outermost Planet

A University of Washington-led international team of astronomers has used data gathered by the Kepler Space Telescope to observe and confirm details of the outermost of seven exoplanets orbiting the star TRAPPIST-1. They confirmed that the planet, TRAPPIST-1h, orbits its star every 18.77 days, is linked in its orbital path to its siblings and is […]

Spectrum of Life: Nonphotosynthetic Pigments Could be Biosignatures of Life on Other Worlds

By Peter Kelley | University of Washington on Jun 22, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

Spectrum of Life: Nonphotosynthetic Pigments Could be Biosignatures of Life on Other Worlds

To find life in the universe, it helps to know what it might look like. If there are organisms on other planets that do not rely wholly on photosynthesis — as some on Earth do not — how might those worlds appear from light-years away? That’s among the questions University of Washington doctoral student Edward […]

Atmospheric Signs of Volcanic Activity Could Aid Search for Life

By Peter Kelley | University of Washington on Jun 10, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

Atmospheric Signs of Volcanic Activity Could Aid Search for Life

Planets with volcanic activity are considered better candidates for life than worlds without such heated internal goings-on. Now, graduate students at the University of Washington have found a way to detect volcanic activity in the atmospheres of exoplanets, or those outside our solar system, when they transit, or pass in front of their host stars. […]

Some Potentially Habitable Planets Began as Gaseous, Neptune-Like Worlds

By Peter Kelley | University of Washington on Jan 30, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

Some Potentially Habitable Planets Began as Gaseous, Neptune-Like Worlds

Two phenomena known to inhibit the potential habitability of planets — tidal forces and vigorous stellar activity — might instead help chances for life on certain planets orbiting low-mass stars, University of Washington astronomers have found. In a paper published this month in the journal Astrobiology, UW doctoral student Rodrigo Luger and co-authorRory Barnes, research […]

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