Astronomers have found a hot, rocky “super Earth” that has existed since almost the dawn of our Milky Way galaxy.
It could profoundly alter the search for intelligent life.
Around 280 light-years distant, TOI-561b is a rocky world a third bigger than Earth that orbits its star in just 10.5 hours.
“TOI-561b is one of the oldest rocky planets yet discovered,” said Lauren Weiss, team leader and postdoctoral fellow at the University of Hawaii. “Its existence shows that the Universe has been forming rocky planets almost since its inception 14 billion years ago.”
Astronomers have found three planets—TOI-561b, TOI-561c and TOI-561d—using NASA's planet-hunting Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS ) space telescope and Keck Observatory in Hawaiʻi.
They’re orbiting a star called (you guessed it) TOI-561, which is a star in the “galactic thick disk”—and that’s what makes this discovery so important.
Here’s what else we know about TOI-561b and its star:
It’s 280 light-years distant in the constellation of Sextans, The Sextant, a faint constellation in the southern hemisphere’s night sky.
It’s a rocky world 1.45 times the size of Earth and about three times its mass—a “super-Earth”—though it has a similar density, which suggests that it’s very old.
It orbits TOI-561, a metal-poor orange dwarf star that’s one of the galaxy's oldest at around 10 billion years old.
The planets are around the same age, making them among the oldest exoplanets yet found.
It orbits its star in just 10.5 hours, making TOI-561b an ultra-short period planet (USP).
It’s tidally-locked to its star, so has a permanent day side that’s likely home to a magma ocean.
Stars in the galactic thick disk may have formed in an ancient galaxy that later merged with our own., or they could be the first stars that formed within the Milky Way. “I wonder what view of the night sky would have been accessible from the rocky planet during its history,” said Weiss.
TOI-561b hints that rocky planets may have been forming for most of the history of the Universe. “I wonder if any of them have anyone on them we could talk to,” said Weiss.
TOI-561b likely does not host life now. Not only does the planet orbit its star twice every Earth-day, but it orbits so close it’s just way too hot for liquid water to exist on its surface—it’s got an average surface temperature of 2,500K (4,000°F).
However, though the daytime side of TOI-561b is likely to be an ocean of magma, the nighttime side could be hard rock.
Most likely is that TOI-561b is a clue that there are many more rocky worlds yet to be discovered around our galaxy's oldest stars that could still be habitable—and therefore just might be home to very ancient lifeforms.
After all, the earliest forms are thought to have taken at least a billion years to come to be on Earth. So the older and more stable the planet, the more likely it will host some kind of lifeforms.
“I would more readily bet on a 10 billion-year-old star having some intelligent civilization on a rocky planet around it rather than a billion-year-old planet,” said Weiss.
It’s more-or-less the same density as Earth, which suggests that it’s old. Why? You’ve heard Carl Sagan’s quote “we are all made of starstuff,” right? Well, so are stars and planets. Metals heavier than iron are forged in the interiors of collapsing stars and spread out into the cosmos by supernovae. Planets form from that “starstuff.” So if a star or planet is low-metal, it must have come to be long ago when fewer supernovae had occurred.
“It turns out that stars being metal-poor is not a challenge for forming planets early in in the Universe,” said Weiss. “Metal-poor stars are just as good as metal-rich stars. That’s a surprise.”