The Hubble Space Telescope didn’t quite spy little green men waving
back at its camera, but it has taken the next step in the search for
life beyond our solar system. As astronomers are reporting this afternoon in the journal Nature,
the telescope detected an organic molecule in the atmosphere of a
planet orbiting another star—the first such detection ever for any of the 277 known “extrasolar” (outside our own solar system) planets.
The molecule is methane. Although best known on Earth as the gas
that rises from rotting garbage, it has a much greater allure on other
planets. On Neptune and Uranus, the abundant methane in the atmosphere
makes the planets look blue-green. But the discovery of methane on the
planet named HD 189733b, which orbits a star 63 light years away in the
constellation Vulpecula (the fox), goes beyond aesthetics. Under the
right conditions of temperature, presence of water and other molecules,
methane can be a star player in what is called prebiotic chemistry, the
reactions that produce amino acids, nucleic acids and eventually the
first living cells. (In 1953 chemist Stanley Miller zapped a mixture
of methane, ammonia, hydrogen and water with electricity and got amino acids, the building blocks of proteins.
“This is a crucial stepping stone to eventually characterizing
prebiotic molecules on planets where life could exist,” Mark Swain of
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., who led the team
that made the discovery, said in a statement.
The discovery comes from observations made last May with Hubble’s Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer,
which identifies molecules by their telltale spectra. As long as it was
aiming at HD 189733b, the spectrometer also confirmed that the planet’s
atmosphere contains water molecules, as the Spitzer Space Telescope
found last year. With both water and organic molecules, HD 189733b
would seem to have the basic ingredients for cooking up something
biological.
There is only one problem. Floating out in Vulpecula (the
constellation is visible from the north pole to 55 degrees south
latitude, with the best visibility is in September), HD 189733b is
what’s called a “hot Jupiter.” That means it is massive and so
hot—because it is so close to its parent star it whips around in a mere
two days—as to be beyond tropical: its atmosphere bursts the mercury at
1,700 degrees Fahrenheit, hot enough to melt silver. That makes HD
189733b too hot for life as we know it: any biological molecules
fortunate enough to form would be torn apart by heat before they could
do anything interesting.
So consider the discovery a proof of concept. Actually, two
concepts. One, it shows that the Hubble can detect interesting
molecules on distant planets using spectroscopy. Two, it shows that
prebiotic molecules can form on these planets, improving the odds that
they also form on planets that orbit in the “habitable zones” around
stars, where temperatures are right for water to remain liquid rather
than ice or vapor. Consider the measurements an important step toward
determining which worlds have the conditions of temperature, pressure
and chemistry for life to exist.
This observation is one of the first steps in the search for life on
another planet, astrophysicist Marc Kuchner of NASA Goddard Space
Flight Center said. “We need to study the chemistry in a planet's
atmosphere in order to determine whether the planet could harbor life.