Nature, Vol.385, No.6613, 234-236, 1997
Habitable Moons Around Extrasolar Giant Planets
Possible planetary objects have now been discovered(1-9) orbiting nine different main-sequence stars. These companion objects (some of which might actually be brown dwarfs) all have a mass at least half that of Jupiter, and are therefore unlikely to be hospitable to Earth-like Life : jovian planets and brown dwarfs support neither a solid nor a liquid surface near which organisms might dwell. Here we argue that redry moons orbiting these companions could be habitable if the planet-moon system orbits the parent star within the so-called ’habitable zone’(10), where life- supporting liquid water(11) could be present. The companions to the stars 16 Cygni B and 47 Ursae Majoris might satisfy this criterion. Such a moon would, however, need to be large enough (>0.12 Earth masses) to retain a substantial and long-lived atmosphere, and would also need to possess a strong magnetic held in order to prevent its atmosphere from being sputtered away by the constant bombardment of energetic ions from the planet’s magnetosphere.