Ground control to exoplanets: a few small nearby planets could see and hear us

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Image by Lumina Obscura from Pixabay
Image by Lumina Obscura from Pixabay

If you're worried about intelligent alien civilisations detecting human life on earth, international astronomers have put together a new list of the stars and planets that have had a chance to see us. The researchers used the Gaia database of nearby space objects to determine that 1,715 stars have been able to see Earth as it moved past the Sun in the last 5,000 years, and a further 319 stars will be able to see Earth in the next 5,000 years. Of those stars, seven are known to be hosts to exoplanets, and four of those stars are currently close enough to receive radio waves from Earth, including Ross 128, Teegarden's Star, and the famous TRAPPIST-1 system. Looking for evidence of exoplanets as they pass in front of stars is one of the current methods used by human scientists to find potentially habitable planets around stars outside our solar system.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Astronomy: Earth as viewed from space

An estimated 1,715 nearby stars may have been in a position to see Earth in the past 5,000 years, according to a paper in Nature. The study goes on to propose that 29 potentially habitable worlds orbiting some of these stars could have both seen Earth and received human-made radio waves. The work indicates that signatures of life from Earth could be detected, assuming that observers would have astronomical instruments comparable to those that we currently use.

One method for detecting exoplanets is to look for signs of them transiting across a star; Earth could also be detectable from other exoplanets using this method. The zone from which nearby stars might have a view of Earth transiting across the Sun has been explored, but previous studies have not considered changing vantage points over time.

Using the Gaia database, which includes a catalogue of nearby astronomical objects within 100 parsecs (around 300 light years) of the Sun, Lisa Kaltenegger and Jaqueline Faherty explore how that view point has changed over time. They determine that 1,715 stars are in the right position to have seen Earth since early human civilization developed (around 5,000 years ago), with an additional 319 stars entering this vantage point in the next 5,000 years. In addition, 75 stars are close enough (within 100 light years) for human-made radio waves to have reached them.

Seven of the stars that lie in the zone from which Earth is visible in the past, present and future are known hosts of exoplanets. For example, the Trappist-1 system — home to seven Earth-sized planets — will enter this zone in 1,642 years and remain there for 2,371 years. Stars with a vantage point from which they could see Earth transit the Sun could be priority targets for searches for potentially habitable planets, the authors infer.

Journal/
conference:
Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Cornell University, USA
Funder: L.K. acknowledges support from the Carl Sagan Institute at Cornell and the Breakthrough Initiative. J.K.F. acknowledges support from the Heising Simons Foundation and the Research Corporation for Science Advancement (award 2019-1488). This work has made use of data from the European Space Agency (ESA) mission Gaia, processed by the Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium DPAC20 (https://www.cosmos.esa.int/gaia, https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia/dpac/consortium). Funding for DPAC has been provided by national institutions, in particular the institutions participating in the Gaia Multilateral Agreement. This research also used NASA’s Astrophysics Data System and the VizieR and SIMBAD databases operated at CDS, Strasbourg, France.
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