Habitability in Brown Dwarf Systems [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1712.00935


The very recent discovery of planets orbiting very low mass stars sheds light on these exotic objects. Planetary systems around low-mass stars and brown dwarfs are very different from our solar system: the planets are expected to be much closer than Mercury, in a layout that could resemble the system of Jupiter and its moons. The recent discoveries point in that direction with, for example, the system of Kepler-42 and especially the system of TRAPPIST-1 which has seven planets in a configuration very close to the moons of Jupiter. Low-mass stars and brown dwarfs are thought to be very common in our neighborhood and are thought to host many planetary systems. The planets orbiting in the habitable zone of brown dwarfs (and very low-mass stars) represent one of the next challenges of the following decades: they are the only planets of the habitable zone whose atmosphere we will be able to probe (e.g. with the JWST).

Read this paper on arXiv…

E. Bolmont
Tue, 5 Dec 17
61/96

Comments: Chapter accepted for the Handbook of Exoplanets in Section “Where Life May Arise: Habitability”. 20 pages, 8 figures