I hadn’t intended to return to habitability around red dwarf stars quite this soon, but on Saturday I read a new paper from Anna Childs (Northwestern University) and Mario Livio (STScI), the gist of which is that a potential challenge to life on such worlds is the lack of stable asteroid belts. This would affect the ability to deliver asteroids to a planetary surface in the late stages of planet formation. I’m interested in this because it points to different planetary system architectures around M-dwarfs than we’re likely to find around other classes of star. What do observations show so far?

You’ll recall that last week we looked at M-dwarf planet habitability in the context of water delivery, again involving the question of early impacts. In that paper, Tadahiro Kimura and Masahiro Ikoma found a separate mechanism to produce the needed water enrichment, while Childs and Livio, working with Rebecca Martin (UNLV) ponder a different question. Their concern is that red dwarf planets would lack the kind of late impacts that produced a reducing atmosphere on Earth. On our planet, via the reaction of the iron core of impactors with water in the oceans, hydrogen would have been released as the iron oxidized, making an atmosphere in which simple organic molecules could emerge.

If we do need this kind of impact to affect the atmosphere to produce life (and this is a big ‘if’), we have a problem with M-dwarfs, for delivering asteroids seems to require a giant planet outside the radius of the snowline to produce a stable asteroid belt.

Depending on the size of the M-dwarf, the snowline radius is found from roughly 0.2 to 1.2 AU, close enough that radial velocity surveys are likely to detect giant planets near but outside this distance. The transit method around such small stars is likewise productive, but we find no such giant planets in those M-dwarf systems where we currently have discovered probable habitable zone planets:

The Kepler detection limit is at orbital periods near 200 days due to the criterion that three transits need to be observed in order for a planet to be confirmed (Bryson et al. 2020). However, in the case of low signal-to-noise observations, two observed transits may suffice, which allows longer-period orbits to be detected. This was the case for Kepler-421 b, which has an orbital period of 704 days (Kipping et al. 2014). Furthermore, any undetected exterior giant planets would likely raise a detectable transit timing variation (TTV) signal on the inner planets (Agol et al. 2004). For these reasons, while the observations could be missing long-period giant planets, the lack of giant planets around low-mass stars that are not too far from the snow line is likely real.

Image: A gas giant in orbit around a red dwarf star. How common is this scenario? We know that such planets can exist, but so far have never detected a gas giant outside the snowline around a system with a planet in the habitable zone. Credit: NASA, ESA and G. Bacon (STScI).

In the search for stable asteroid belts, what we are looking for is a giant planet beyond the snowline, with the asteroid belt inside its orbit, as well as an inner terrestrial system of planets. None of the currently observed planets in the habitable zone around M-dwarfs shows a giant planet in the right position to produce an asteroid belt. Which is not to say that such planets do not exist around M-dwarfs, but that we do not yet find any in systems where habitable zone planets occur. Let me quote the paper again:

By analyzing data from the Exoplanet Archive, we found that there are observed giant planets outside of the snow line radius around M dwarfs, and in fact the distribution peaks there. This, combined with observations of warm dust belts, suggests that asteroid belt formation may still be possible around M dwarfs. However, we found that in addition to a lower occurrence rate of giant planets around M dwarf stars, multiplanet systems that contain a giant planet are also less common around M dwarfs than around G-type stars. Lastly, we found a lack of hot and warm Jupiters around M dwarfs, relative to the K-, G-, and F-type stars, potentially indicating that giant planet formation and/or evolution does take separate pathways around M dwarfs.

Image: This is Figure 2 from the paper. Caption: Locations of the giant planets, r, normalized by the snow-line radius in the system, vs. the stellar mass, M?. The point sizes in the top plot are proportional to m?. Red dots indicate planets around M dwarf stars and blue dots indicate planets around FGK-type stars. The point sizes in the legend correspond to Jupiter-mass planets. The bottom plot shows normalized histograms of the giant planet locations for both single planet and multiplanet systems. The location of the snow line is marked by a black dashed vertical line. Credit: Childs et al.

The issues raised in this paper all point to how little we can say with confidence at this point. Are asteroid impacts really necessary for life to emerge? The question would quickly be resolved by finding biosignatures on an M-dwarf planet without a gas giant in the system, presuming no asteroid belt had formed by other methods. As one with a deep curiosity about M-dwarf planetary possibilities, I find this work intriguing because it points to different architectures around red dwarfs than other stars. It’s a difference we’ll explore as we begin to fill in the blanks by evaluating M-dwarf planets for early biosignature searches.

The paper is Childs et al., “Life on Exoplanets in the Habitable Zone of M Dwarfs?,” Astrophysical Journal Letters Vol. 937, No. 2 (4 October 2022), L42 (full text).

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