Rocky Worlds Discussions

PODCAST · technology

Rocky Worlds Discussions

Rocky Worlds Discussions bring together planetary scientists, astronomers, and earth scientists to foster interactions across the communities and build the collaborations that will pave the way for the next decade of rocky exoplanet discovery and characterisation. Creating a globally connected community, Rocky Worlds Discussions aim to achieve continuous exchange and face-to-face discussions on a monthly basis. The setup for each meeting consists of a talk by a speaker highlighting challenging and creative questions surrounding the nature of rocky worlds plus extended plenary discussion. The essential goal of the meetings is to stimulate a lively debate on major interdisciplinary questions across the communities of exoplanet astronomy, planetary science, and astrobiology. All meetings are conducted virtually via Zoom. Generously supported by: The Royal Astronomical Society - https://ras.ac.uk The Meteoritical Society - https://meteoritical.org

  1. 20

    Geodynamical evolution of rocky planets: Combining models and observations

    Ana-Catalina Plesa (DLR) Understanding the interior of rocky planets such as Mercury, the Moon, Mars, and Venus helps us to put the Earth in a global planetary context. The surfaces of terrestrial planets that we observe today record billions of y...

  2. 19

    Magma ocean dynamos in Earth and super-Earths

    Miki Nakajima (University of Rochester) Planets experience numerous large impacts at the end of the planetary accretion stage. Such large impacts can produce deep magma oceans (MOs) within planets. During magma ocean crystallization, part of the m...

  3. 18

    A Hell of a Phase Curve: Mapping the Surface and Atmosphere of a Lava Planet

    Lisa Dang (Université de Montréal) Lava planets are ultra-short-period planets with bulk densities consistent with terrestrial composition, but dayside temperatures hot enough to melt—and vaporize—rock. Of these planets, the most favorable candida...

  4. 17

    Venus: Defying the Solar Wind Without a Magnetic Shield

    Moa Persson (Swedish Institute of Space Physics) Venus has no magnetic shield, yet its atmosphere remains astonishingly thick. How does a planet withstand the solar wind without a protective magnetosphere? The answer lies in the complex interactio...

  5. 16

    Rocky Worlds 4 - Day 1

    Day 1 of the fourth edition of the biennial Rocky Worlds conference The planets that are best understood are the four terrestrial planets of our own solar system. Applying the detailed understanding gleaned from these bodies is crucial in our int...

  6. 15

    Small exoplanets and the hunt for an Earth twin

    Annelies Mortier (University of Birmingham) In just 30 years, we went from no known exoplanets to more than 6000 known exoplanets. This growing sample of exoplanetary systems allows us to study their mass-radius relationship or lack thereof and th...

  7. 14

    Influence of Bulk Composition and Lava Flows on the Long-Term Evolution of Venus

    Diogo Lourenco (ETH Zurich) Venus’ mass and radius are similar to those of Earth, yet its internal structure, chemical composition, and overral evolution and dynamics remain poorly constrained. A striking difference is Venus’ exceptionally long la...

  8. 13

    The Role of Volatile Delivery, Phase, and Partitioning in Setting Planetary Radii

    Remo Burn (MPIA) Owing to observational advances, exoplanets are no longer treated as simple point masses in planet formation theory - their masses, radii, and thus densities are now measurable. Combined with atmospheric composition data, the cha...

  9. 12

    Lifting the Hazy Veil of the Archetype Sub-Neptune GJ 1214b with JWST

    Kazumasa Ohno (NAOJ) GJ 1214b is the archetype low-density sub-Neptune orbiting around a M-dwarf. The bulk composition of GJ 1214b remained elusive, as its mass-radius relation can be explained either by a rocky core with a hydrogen-rich envelope...

  10. 11

    A robust, agnostic molecular biosignature based on py-GC-MS and machine learning

    Michael L. Wong & Anirudh Prabhu (Carnegie Earth & Planets Laboratory) Humanity is embarking on a potential golden age of astrobiology, with numerous current and future space missions being tasked with the explicit goal of searching for evidenc...

  11. 10

    Planet formation with ALMA & JWST: Chemical signatures of pebble migration in protoplanetary discs

    Sebastiaan Krijt (University of Exeter) The properties of planetary systems depend sensitively on the physical and chemical structure of the protoplanetary discs in which they form. At the same time, the processes associated with planet formation...

  12. 9

    Tidally-driven volcanism and mass loss at Jupiter’s moon Io

    Katherine de Kleer (Caltech) Tides are a key internal energy source for numerous Solar System moons as well as exoplanets, driving their chemical evolution, geological activity, and even habitability. At Jupiter’s moon Io, tides power dramatic vo...

  13. 8

    Venus' climate history and connections to recent spacecraft data

    Michael Way (NASA/GISS, Uppsala University) In recent years a great deal of work has appeared related to better quantifying Venus' evolutionary path from Magma Ocean to present day Hell House world. We will present the latest results on these evo...

  14. 7

    The case for secondary atmospheres on temperate rocky planets around M-dwarfs

    Joshua Krissansen-Totton (University of Washington) Early JWST observations of hot rocky exoplanets have revealed that many of these objects may be airless rocks. For example, JWST observations of TRAPPIST-1b [1] and c [2] disfavor substantial ...

  15. 6

    Rocky Worlds in High Spectral Resolution

    Jayne Birkby (University of Oxford) High resolution cross-correlation spectroscopy (HRCCS) has proven a powerful and highly versatile tool in the characterization of exoplanet atmospheres. Its sensitivity to the position and shape of exoplanet sp...

  16. 5

    JWST Thermal Emission Spectroscopy of the Super-Earth 55 Cnc e

    Renyu Hu (JPL Caltech) JWST enables the measurements of the thermal emission spectra of small exoplanets to characterize their atmospheres and surfaces. Such measurements open up a new way to test models of atmospheric evolution and retention. I ...

  17. 4

    Mars’ Magnetic Field: Progress and Puzzles

    Anna Mittelholz (ETH Zurich) Planetary missions to Mars have enabled us to study its magnetic field environment - an important component of Mars’ history that is intertwined with virtually any other aspect of planetary evolution. Substantial prog...

  18. 3

    Rocky Worlds 4 - Day 3

    Day 3 of the fourth edition of the biennial Rocky Worlds conference The planets that are best understood are the four terrestrial planets of our own solar system. Applying the detailed understanding gleaned from these bodies is crucial in our int...

  19. 2

    Efficient degassing of early-formed planetesimals: Water delivery to Earth via unmelted material

    Megan Newcombe (University of Maryland) The timing of delivery and the types of bodies that contributed volatiles to the terrestrial planets remain highly debated. For example, it is unknown if differentiated bodies, such as that responsible for ...

  20. 1

    Unlocking the origin of life-essential volatiles in rocky planets using iron meteorites

    Damanveer Singh Grewal (Arizona State University) The habitability of rocky planets, including Earth, hinges on how and when they acquired life-essential volatiles like nitrogen, carbon, and water. Our current understanding on this topic is prima...

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Rocky Worlds Discussions bring together planetary scientists, astronomers, and earth scientists to foster interactions across the communities and build the collaborations that will pave the way for the next decade of rocky exoplanet discovery and characterisation. Creating a globally connected community, Rocky Worlds Discussions aim to achieve continuous exchange and face-to-face discussions on a monthly basis. The setup for each meeting consists of a talk by a speaker highlighting challenging and creative questions surrounding the nature of rocky worlds plus extended plenary discussion. The essential goal of the meetings is to stimulate a lively debate on major interdisciplinary questions across the communities of exoplanet astronomy, planetary science, and astrobiology. All meetings are conducted virtually via Zoom. Generously supported by: The Royal Astronomical Society - https://ras.ac.uk The Meteoritical Society - https://meteoritical.org

HOSTED BY

SolarSystem.video

Produced by Rocky Worlds Discussions

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!