
Rendition of the molten surface of COROT-7b, the planet where it rains rocks. Credit: ESO/L. Calcada. (source)
Imagine the following scenario:
You are preparing to leave for work and shout down the hall to your significant other. “Honey, what’s the weather supposed to be like?”
And the reply: “50% chance of rock.”
Best pack the steel umbrella.
If there were life on the newly-discovered exoplanet COROT-7b, they would face a unique problem. Unlike Earth, where precipitation falls in various forms of water, on COROT-7b it actually rains rocks.
Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis [WUSTL] have been running models of the planet that was discovered in February. According to these models, the atmosphere “is made up of the ingredients of rocks and when "a front moves in," pebbles condense out of the air and rain into lakes of molten lava below.” [WUSTL]
COROT-7b is among only a handful of known rocky exoplanets (planets outside our solar system). Most are gas supergiants, like Jupiter. However, other than its rocky surface, COROT-7b is far from Earth-like. Besides the strange pebble showers, it is so close to its sun that its orbit is like the Moon around Earth. One face is always pointed towards its sun. That side is thought to have a temperature of 4220 degrees Fahrenheit.
At that heat, rocks will vaporize. The vaporization of the its surface is why Dr. Bruce Fegley Jr of WUSTL believes the precipitation on COROT-7b is pebbly in nature. “The only atmosphere this object has is produced from vapor arising from hot molten silicates in a lava lake or lava ocean," Fegley says. [WUSTL]
Published in The Astrophysical Journal, the study utilized a computer system originally developed in 1986. Though the exact composition of the planet is unknown, running the program with various constraints yielded consistent results: rock showers. "As you go higher the atmosphere gets cooler and eventually you get saturated with different types of 'rock' the way you get saturated with water in the atmosphere of Earth," explains Fegley. "But instead of a water cloud forming and then raining water droplets, you get a 'rock cloud' forming and it starts raining out little pebbles of different types of rock." [WUSTL]
It is nearly impossible to imagine a deluge of pebbles falling from the sky, or turning on the morning forecast to hear reports of “rocking” instead of “raining.” But the research goes to show just how unusual the universe can be.
The WUSTL press release has an even more detailed explanation of the process. Be sure to investigate it here.













Comments
... I want to see that! It paints a really pretty mental image.
I am fascinated by this news, however this reporting is misleading.
"According to these MODELS" ... does not imply "it ACTUALLY rains rocks".
Do not confuse the map with the terrain (or in this case the model with the weather). This is supposed to be a report on a science topic, not an opinion piece.
"Critical Thinker" should get a grip. Do we deny that quantum physics is "actually" happening because it's based on models? No. Our best evidence is that this planet has pebble rain. The article is clear enough that the rock-rain has not been directly observed.
Snows rocks surely...
I have looked at the published article yet but I would expected the planet to co-rotate if it's so close to it. As a result, the same face is always exposed to the star and hence pebble rain might not happen... Just a thought.
Of course, technically hail is a rock, because ice is a mineral, and so we can also have 'rocky' forecasts on Earth - not including local forecasts for ash/lapilli/volcanic bomb fallout from volcanic eruptions
Critical Thinker is about as dense as COROT-7b's precipitation.
I'm sure there is a model of that as well.
Seems to me that all the vaporizable surface rocks would have rained out to the dark side long ago. Especially if the planet is tidally locked.
I think this sentence should say, "handful of KNOWN rocky exoplanets":
COROT-7b is among only a handful of rocky exoplanets (planets outside our solar system).
I think this sentence should say, "handful of KNOWN rocky exoplanets":
COROT-7b is among only a handful of rocky exoplanets (planets outside our solar system).
@EveryonesACritic: Quantum physics models have been proven correct by experiment. No good scientist calls a model real until enough of it's hypothesis are proven.
I have had some interesting conversatiions of this topic today that did not simply believe the models results. For instance one of which called in doubt the size of the 'pebbles'. Given the role that electrostatic attraction plays in condensing lightweight water molecules into a drop, it is less likely that mineral molecules would assemble in pebble sized drops by the same mechanism. Dust may be more likely during the solid stage of this 'rock cycle'.
So saying 'actually' misleads the casual reader of this article. Many readers would put their faith in the reporter's interpretation without noticing the discrepancy. IMHO mistaken expectations of science contribute to people's disenchantment and our current dearth of interest by students and the general public- but that's another conversation.
Pics or it didn't happen!
First SF author who writes a good story set there gets a .
Got something to say?
Examiner.com is looking for writers, photographers, and videographers to join the fastest growing group of local insiders. If you are interested in growing your online rep apply to be an Examiner today!