Centauri Dreams has often discussed red dwarf stars and the question of habitability. This time let’s focus in on a nearby candidate called AU Mic, an M-class dwarf some 10 parsecs (roughly 32 light years) from Earth. At twelve million years old, this is one of the nearest young dwarfs, and it’s known to possess a dusty debris disk. In fact, what we see around AU Mic looks like the late stages of planet formation, with planet-sized objects disturbing smaller disk materials and creating something like our own Kuiper Belt.

The lesson of AU Mic seems clear: planet formation around M-class dwarfs is probably common, even though we see few debris disks around older stars of this class. That may simply be the result of the sensitivity of our search technologies, and in any case the smallest exoplanets we’ve yet found orbiting main sequence stars orbit red dwarfs (consider the rocky world around Gliese 876).

Let’s be clear on this: we’re likely to get solid confirmation of smaller, terrestrial-sized worlds using the transit method within a fairly short time, conceivably even before the 2008 launch of the Kepler mission. There is every reason to suspect they are common.

In that light (dim and red though it be), red dwarfs are very much on the table for future terrestrial planet finder missions as well as SETI searches. That was the conclusion of a 2005 interdisciplinary workshop that reappraised M-stars in terms of habitability. The session was organized by the SETI Institute and sponsored by NASA. And the newly available paper on the proceedings contains heartening news for the astrobiology community, for the increasing focus on these stars greatly expands the range of possible life-bearing environments. By some measures, M-class stars comprise fully 75 percent of all stars (not counting brown dwarfs), and half of the stellar mass in the Milky Way.

Detecting terrestrial planets around such stars is obviously a challenge, but even more so is the analysis of such a planet once found. We know that worlds in the tight orbits required (.1 to .35 AU for the larger M stars and even closer for the smaller) will become tidally locked, yet numerous recent studies have shown that habitable environments are possible. Seen from Earth, an active atmosphere should show an interesting infrared signature. From the paper reporting on the workshop’s findings:

On a dry world, or a planet whose atmosphere has collapsed, IR emission mostly comes from the surface, so that the dark side will appear far colder than the dayside when viewed at these frequencies. However, with a hydrological cycle comes the presence of water vapor and clouds – the SP will have clouds present for most of the time, and so IR emission here will come mostly from the cold cloud tops. Indeed, the dayside of such a planet might actually appear as cold in the IR as the darkside, in the same way as the Western Pacific region, which has the hottest sea surface temperature, appears very cold when seen in the IR. Such observations might actually provide evidence for a planet with an active hydrological cycle.

‘SP’ in the passage above refers to ‘substellar point,’ the location where the planet’s star is directly overhead. Here again we run into interesting variables. You would think the terminator — the boundary between the day and night sides of the planet — would be the most likely place for life because red dwarfs are frequently prone to dangerous flare activity. But you also get less sunlight there, whereas thick clouds could change the effects of solar radiation everywhere on the day side. So far there are no ‘showstoppers.’ It continues to appear that if liquid water and the needed constituents for life can be found in this environment, M-stars should become high value astrobiological targets.

The paper is Tarter et al., “A Re-appraisal of the Habitability of Planets Around M Dwarf Stars,” accepted for publication in Astrobiology, with preprint available here. It’s a long study that belongs on the shelf or disk of anyone following planet habitability and/or SETI studies, and a second workshop slated for 2007 should refine its conclusions.