Skip to main content

James Webb Telescope eyes exoplanet with oceans of lava

The James Webb Space Telescope is about to start peering into deep space in one of the most highly anticipated missions of recent years.

Five months after launch, and following a million-mile voyage to a spot that put it in orbit around our sun, the most powerful space telescope ever built is currently performing final calibrations of its onboard scientific instruments. Then, in just a few weeks’ time, it will begin the exciting work of trying to unlock the mysteries of our universe.

This week, NASA disclosed that the James Webb Space Telescope team has already identified two celestial bodies that it wants to explore with the space-based observatory: The lava-covered 55 Cancri e and the airless LHS 3844 b.

Both of these exoplanets (a planet outside our solar system) are classified as “super-Earths” for their size and rocky composition. The Webb team will train the telescope’s high-precision spectrographs on both in the hope of finding out more about the “geologic diversity of planets across the galaxy, and the evolution of rocky planets like Earth,” NASA said.

55 Cancri e

55 Cancri e is a mere 1.5 million miles from its sun (we’re 93 million miles from ours) and therefore features surface temperatures far above the melting point of typical rock-forming minerals. It means that parts of its surface are likely to be covered in oceans of lava.

The Webb team is keen to find out if 55 Cancri e is tidally locked, resulting in one side always facing its star. Such a state would be usual for planets that orbit this close to a star, but earlier observations carried out by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope suggest the hottest part of the planet is away from the area that directly faces the star and that the heat on the day side varies.

This has left scientists wondering if 55 Cancri e has a dynamic atmosphere that shifts heat around. It’s a question that Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) should be able to answer by capturing the thermal emission spectrum of the day side of the planet.

Alternatively, it’s also possible that the planet is not tidally locked and is actually rotating. In this case, the surface would “heat up, melt, and even vaporize during the day, forming a very thin atmosphere that Webb could detect,” NASA said, adding that, in the evening, the vapor would then cool and condense to form “droplets of lava that would rain back to the surface, turning solid again as night falls.” Again, the team plans to use Webb’s NIRCam to determine if this is the case.

LHS 3844 b

The much smaller and cooler LHS 3844 b offers Webb scientists a chance to closely analyze the solid rock on an exoplanet’s surface. Different types of rock have different spectra, so the Webb team plans to use MIRI to learn more about the planet’s composition.

MIRI will capture the thermal emission spectrum of the day side of LHS 3844 b and compare it to spectra of known rocks, like basalt and granite, to determine its composition, NASA said.

Webb’s observations of the two exoplanets are expected to help scientists in much broader ways. “They will give us fantastic new perspectives on Earth-like planets in general, helping us learn what the early Earth might have been like when it was hot like these planets are today,” said Laura Kreidberg of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy.

The James Webb Space Telescope mission is also aiming to track down the first galaxies formed after the Big Bang, find out how galaxies evolved from formation to now, and measure the physical and chemical properties of planetary systems — among other goals.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
One galaxy, two views: see a comparison of images from Hubble and Webb
The peculiar galaxy NGC 3256 takes centre stage in this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. This distorted galaxy is the wreckage of a head-on collision between two spiral galaxies which likely occurred 500 million years ago, and it is studded with clumps of young stars which were formed as gas and dust from the two galaxies collided.

It might not seem obvious why astronomers need multiple different powerful space telescopes. Surely a more powerful telescope is better than a less powerful one? So why are there multiple different telescopes in orbit, either around Earth or around the sun?

The answer is to do with two main factors. One is the telescope's field of view, meaning how much of the sky it looks at. Some telescopes are useful for looking at large areas of the sky in less detail, working as survey telescopes to identify objects for further research or to look at the universe on a large scale -- like the recently launched Euclid mission. While others, like the Hubble Space Telescope, look at small areas of the sky in great detail, which is useful for studying particular objects.

Read more
James Webb spots the most distant active supermassive black hole ever discovered
Crop of Webb's CEERS Survey image.

As well as observing specific objects like distant galaxies and planets here in our solar system, the James Webb Space Telescope is also being used to perform wide-scale surveys of parts of the sky. These surveys observe large chunks of the sky to identify important targets like very distant, very early galaxies, as well as observe intriguing objects like black holes. And one such survey has recently identified the most distant active supermassive black hole seen so far.

While a typical black hole might have a mass up to around 10 times that of the sun, supermassive black holes are much more massive, with a mass that can be millions or even billions of times the mass of the sun. These monsters are found at the heart of galaxies and are thought to play important roles in the formation and merging of galaxies.

Read more
Saturn as you’ve never seen it before, captured by Webb telescope
Saturn captured by the James Webb Space Telescope

NASA has shared a gorgeous image of Saturn captured recently by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

Webb’s first near-infrared observations of the second largest planet in our solar system also show several of Saturn’s moons: Dione, Enceladus, and Tethys.

Read more