Time and Tides Have An Effect on Life

The Recipe for Life-bearing Planets Gets More Complex

The creation of life on our planet was a long, drawn-out affair, taking more than a billion years of chemical and biochemical processing to accomplish after the planet formed some 4.5 billion years ago. Technically, life began some 3.8 billion years ago in some life-friendly oasis on the planet, meaning that the correct conditions were there for some chemically-rich soup to react to something like an influx of heat or a zap of lightning, producing the first living things.  There’s enough ambiguity in there that just about anybody can come up with a theory about what happened (including some pretty jaw-dropping ones about LGMs, travelling deities, and so on), but the scientific consensus (based on verifiable research) is that the primal ooze finally combined in ways that led to the first life forms, and from there it was evolution all the way, baby.

Before all this happened, though, the planet had to form, and it had to do it in the right place. There’s the rub.  If a planet forms too close to its star, its surface gets broiled. Mercury’s a good example here — its surface is alternately flame-roasted and then chilled as it rotates on its axis only 69 million kilometers from the Sun. Get too far away from the Sun, say out in the realm of the gas giants, and it’s too cold for a hard-body planet (i.e. rocky) to form life.

Distance isn’t the only characteristic you have to consider, however.  There’s also a little thing called “tides” — and I’m not talking simply about the ocean tides we experience here on Earth, although they’re part and parcel of the same phenomenon.

Jupiters moon Io
Jupiter's moon Io is heated by tidal friction.

When two bodies interact with each other, gravitational interactions can push and pull on their surfaces, creating tides — and that also heats them.

Jupiter’s moon Io shows an extreme case of tidal heating — gravitational interactions between Jupiter and this tiny moon and its sibling moons Europa and Ganymede cause the surface to bulge up and down. This also heats Io’s interior, and the end result is a volcanic moon.

Tidal heating between a star and its planet (or even a planet and its moons) can drive plate tectonics. Earth has plates, is heated from within, and also has a “tidal” relationship with the Moon. Our planet’s “basement” is basically made up of seven major plates (and several smaller ones) and the continents and oceans ride along on top of them. (For more about plate tectonics on Earth, go here or here.).  Among other things, tectonics  keeps excessive carbon dioxide from accumulating in a planetary atmosphere. If it hadn’t performed this service on Earth, we might have a deadly greenhouse atmosphere like the one at Venus.

A group of scientists at University of Arizona is looking into the role that such tides play on planets and what influence they may have on whether life could evolve on rocky planets around other stars. Brian Jackson, Rory Barnes and Richard Greenberg of UA’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory gave a paper at the Division of Planetary Sciences meeting in Ithaca,  New York, and in it they say that tides can play a major role in heating terrestrial planets. Such tides could create scenes of unbelievable hellishnesson rocky alien worlds that would be livable if conditions were better. And tidal heat can work in reverse, creatiing conditions favorable to life on planets that would otherwise be unlivable.

A map of Earths tectonic plates -- did they help life get started?
A map of Earth's tectonic plates -- did they help life get started?

What this means is that as astronomers search out worlds on other planets, they might need to examine exoplanets in great detail to see if tidal heating (from their stars or interactions with possible moons) is playing a role in their livability factors. Recently there have been so-called “super Earths” discovered around other stars. These planets are somewhere between two and ten times as massive as Earth. If they really ARE Earthlike (meaning that they’re rocky bodies around the size of the Earth or bigger) then it’s possible that tidal heating from interactions with their star or nearby moons may be great enough to melt them, or at least produce volcanism at a level that we see at Io. This would make them pretty poor prospects for being life-bearing planets, and they’d be more like  “super-Ios.”

The more massive a planet is, the greater the effects of tidal heating will be on its surface and interior.  This means that the most easily detectable super-Earths could be dominated by volcanic activity, which is one of the big conclusions that the University of Arizona team came to in their research.  So, the first Earth-like planets found are going to be the most easily spotted, and thus they’ll be big. This means they’ll probably going to be strongly heated and have big volcanoes.

A super-Earth with possible plates?
A super-Earth with plate tectonics and experiencing tidal forces needs the right amount of both to support life.

And as astronomers find Earth-like planets in what they cal,l the “habitable zone” around other stars, those planets may well NOT be habitable if they’re gobsmacked by tidal heating.

On the other hand, if a planet is smaller than it should be, or maybe lies outside the habitable zone, it could still support life if it is heated by tidal interactions that could cause outgassing of volatiles (gases, ices) that enrich a planet’s atmosphere with the right stuff needed for life. Tidal heating also can generate sub-surface liquid oceans on water-rich rocky planets that would otherwise be frozen, just as tidal heating is believed to warm a sub-surface liquid water ocean on Jupiter’s moon Europa.

Also, tidal heating could produce enough heat to drive plate tectonics for billions of years, long enough for life to appear and flourish.

So, for those of you keeping score at home, the ingredient list for life is getting more and more refined. And, when we look at other planets in our search for life, we need at where the planet exists in relation to its star, how long it’s been around, whether it can supply the water, warmth, and “food” for life, and now, whether or not it is subject to the correct application of tidal force.

The Atomic Bomb of the Middle Ages

or, The Physics of Punkin’ Chunkin’

What could be more geeky than going out on a beautiful fall afternoon and watching some guys do physics? Not much, I’ll admit. But, that’s what we did this weekend and by golly, we enjoyed watching guys hurl, just as folks have been doing ever since the Middle Ages, when flinging rocks at your enemy’s castle was the state of the art in warfare. Only this time it’s more peaceable — the guys we watched were hurling pumpkins more than 2,000 feet at a pop.

The trebuchet at Yankee Siege hurled a pumpkin more than 2,000 feet on October 12, 2008.
The trebuchet at Yankee Siege hurled a pumpkin more than 2,000 feet on October 12, 2008.

The occasion was the Punkin Chunkin practice shooting at Yankee Siege in Greenville, New Hampshire. They don’t hurl with their hands — they use a trebuchet.  Those of you who are Northern Exposure fans may recall that in one episode they hurled a piano into a creek using a trebuchet.  Those of you who are physics fans have probably already created your own trebuchet and flung stuff with it.  You can learn  more about trebuchets at Trebuchet.com, where they have all kinds of discussions about hurling stuff, feature some books and, of course, simulators and desktop trebuchets for sale.

So, aside from howling and stamping and laughing and clapping as these guys wound up their siege engine and hurl a pumpkin almost half a mile, what’s the deal with these things? Why the fascination?

A trebuchet is basically the oldest projectile weapon machine in the world. It was used in the Middle Ages to strike fear into the hearts of opponents, and it was fairly easy to build with the materials at hand.  All you needed was a sling to hold the load (your basic rock as a weapon) and a structure that used a lever arm to hurl the rock.

The lever and swing principle behind the trebuchet. Courtesy of Thinkquest.org.
The lever and swing principle behind the trebuchet. Courtesy of Thinkquest.org.

A lever arm works by sticking something on one end of a stick or board and then dropping something heavy on or from the other end (a counter-weight) .  The projectile load goes flying off, hopefully toward your opponent. It’s like a see-saw, only a lot bigger and more dangerous and ‘way more complex, as you can see by the picture of Yankee Siege’s trebuchet.

It’s physics, man.  And, when you watch them wind it up, get it loaded, and then let some little kids tug on the rope that launches the trebuchet, it’s a thing of beauty to watch that regulation pumpkin soar into the air in a perfect arc.  People stand up and cheer and hoot and holler.

Maybe you don’ t have a trebuchet in your neck of the woods, but that’s no reason not to play with one and do a little physics at the same time.  Take the Treb Challenge by building your own virtual trebuchet and flinging some weight around.  And remember, as they say at The Hurl, it’s not what you hurl, but the hurl itself that matters!

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