info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Formation, habitability, and detection of extrasolar moons
Registro en:
Heller R, Williams D, Kipping D, Limbach MA, Turner E, Greenberg R, Sasaki T, Bolmont E, Grasset O, Lewis K, Barnes R, Zuluaga JI. Formation, habitability, and detection of extrasolar moons. Astrobiology. 2014 Sep;14(9):798-835. doi: 10.1089/ast.2014.1147.
1531-1074
10.1089/ast.2014.1147
1557-8070
Autor
Zuluaga Callejas, Jorge Iván
Heller, René
Williams, Darren
Kipping, David
Limbach, Mary Anne
Turner, Edwin
Greenberg, Richard
Sasaki, Takanori
Bolmont, Émeline
Grasset, Olivier
Lewis, Karen
Barnes, Rory
Institución
Resumen
ABSTRACT: The diversity and quantity of moons in the Solar System suggest a manifold population of natural satellites exist
around extrasolar planets. Of peculiar interest from an astrobiological perspective, the number of sizable moons
in the stellar habitable zones may outnumber planets in these circumstellar regions. With technological and
theoretical methods now allowing for the detection of sub-Earth-sized extrasolar planets, the first detection of an
extrasolar moon appears feasible. In this review, we summarize formation channels of massive exomoons that
are potentially detectable with current or near-future instruments. We discuss the orbital effects that govern
exomoon evolution, we present a framework to characterize an exomoon’s stellar plus planetary illumination as
well as its tidal heating, and we address the techniques that have been proposed to search for exomoons. Most
notably, we show that natural satellites in the range of 0.1–0.5 Earth mass (i) are potentially habitable, (ii) can
form within the circumplanetary debris and gas disk or via capture from a binary, and (iii) are detectable with
current technology. COL0038262