 | Mike Williams wrote: > Wasn't it jcamjr who wrote: > >An interesting side thought has to do with the viability of an earth > >type planet in orbit of a red dwarf for the planet to recieve enough > >energy for water to remain in a liquid state it would have to orbit so > >close to its star as to be tidaly locked with one side to the star and > >the other always in darkness this would be a poor place to hope to find > >a viable biosphere However what if instead this world was in fact a > >moon in orbit of a giant planet within the stars lifezone? this would > >seem to solve the tidal lock problem. Someone tell me what I'm missing > >here Im sure theres something wrong with this scenerio > > I don't see any problem with life on a world tidally locked to a star. > > The big problem with life around a red dwarf, however, is that the > habitable zone is very narrow. As the brightness of the star evolves, > the habitable zone moves closer to or further from the star and the > planet is left in an uninhabitable region. The habitable zone of our Sun > is wide enough that the Earth has remained inside the habitable zone > despite moderate changes in solar brightness.
True, but aren't the changes in the brightness of red dwarves both small and very, very slow (even in geological timeframes)?
-- Wakboth
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