gg_account
gg_account t1_je09zma wrote
Reply to comment by FlingingGoronGonads in James Webb Space Telescope finds no atmosphere on Earth-like TRAPPIST-1 exoplanet by locus_towers
Makes me wonder if B has an atmosphere but it's all frozen into a giant glacier on the night side.
gg_account t1_jdxenq8 wrote
Reply to James Webb Space Telescope finds no atmosphere on Earth-like TRAPPIST-1 exoplanet by locus_towers
This is actually pretty puzzling. B was thought to have the thickest atmosphere of all the planets because of its low apparent density. This could mean all the planets have underestimated densities, or maybe their composition on a whole is very different from our solar system.
gg_account t1_jdx6o50 wrote
Reply to comment by nmfpriv in James Webb Space Telescope finds no atmosphere on Earth-like TRAPPIST-1 exoplanet by locus_towers
Closest planet to star, so most transits, so most data to analyze.
gg_account t1_jdx6fuh wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in James Webb Space Telescope finds no atmosphere on Earth-like TRAPPIST-1 exoplanet by locus_towers
They modeled several scenarios and this temperature almost exactly matches an airless black rock.
gg_account t1_j27a08w wrote
Reply to comment by bookers555 in James Webb Space Telescope meets the 7 intriguing exoplanets of TRAPPIST-1 | Space by mzpip
Sad. It would mean likely no atmospheres on Earth sized worlds around any red dwarfs, which are the most common kind of star.
gg_account t1_je0pbaf wrote
Reply to comment by FTL_Diesel in James Webb Space Telescope finds no atmosphere on Earth-like TRAPPIST-1 exoplanet by locus_towers
Interesting thanks! The data I was looking at was apparently from 2018. So it seems the jump to "there must be a thick atmosphere" came from an assumption that the planet had as much iron as Earth?