The possibility that there is liquid water on an exoplanet’s surface usually flags it as “potentially habitable,” but the reality is that too much water might prevent life from taking hold.
“On Earth, the ocean is in contact with some rock. If we have too much water, it creates high-pressure ice underneath the ocean, which separates it from the planet’s rocky interior,” said Caroline Dorn, a geophysicist at ETH Zurich, Switzerland, who led new research in exoplanet interiors.
This high-pressure ice prevents minerals and chemical compounds from being exchanged between the rocks and the water. In theory, that should make the ocean barren and lifeless. But Dorn’s team argues that even exoplanets that have enough water to form such high-pressure ice can host life if the majority of the water is not stored in the surface oceans but is held much deeper in the planet’s core. The water in the core can’t sustain life—it’s not even in its molecular form there. But it means that a substantial fraction of a planet’s water isn’t on the surface, which makes the surface oceans a little more shallow and prevents high-pressure ice from forming at their bottom.
Planetary youngsters
“If you looked at the exoplanet community three to five years ago, everybody was thinking that [water] can only be present on the surface of planets,” Dorn said. Scientists, having no evidence to the contrary, simply assumed alien worlds were built how they thought the Earth was built, with the water primarily present in the surface oceans, with some portion, around 40 million cubic kilometers, held deeper in the crust. But all this reasoning went out the window in 2020 when a team of scientists at the University College London published a study claiming the Earth was not built that way at all.
Instead, the 2020 study argued that the majority of water on Earth is not in the oceans or the crust but in the core of the planet and that the core can host 30 to 37 times as much water as all our surface oceans combined. “When the planet is very young and hot, you have a soup of magma with everything mixed in—you have silicates contained in the mantle of the planet but also drops of iron that will eventually sink down and form the core,” Dorn said.