Washington, DC— Our galaxy’s most abundant type of planet could be rich in liquid water due to formative interactions between ...
Researchers have discovered more than 6,000 exoplanets in our Milky Way. Of these, the sub-Neptune class, which are smaller ...
Our galaxy's most abundant type of planet could be rich in liquid water due to formative interactions between magma oceans ...
Experiments at high temperatures and pressures reveal chemistry that can generate water on the surface of exoplanets ...
Our galaxy's most abundant type of planet could be rich in liquid water due to formative interactions between magma oceans and ...
New research uses laboratory experiments to demonstrate that water is naturally created during the planet formation process.
This photo shows the upper part of the water tornado model. The acrylic glas tank has a diameter of 50 centimetres and is illuminated with LED strips. The water forms a vortex whose surface shape ...
In the beginning, when planets were newborn, they glowed like furnaces, vast oceans of molten rock wrapped in heavy blankets ...
Tests on olivine hint that water-rich exoplanets could generate H2O internally, possibly explaining ocean worlds and even some of Earth’s early water.