Department of Physics & Astronomy, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.
Astrobiology. 2011 Nov;11(9):855-73. doi: 10.1089/ast.2010.0555. Epub 2011 Nov 7.
We present a model of the galactic habitable zone (GHZ), described in terms of the spatial and temporal dimensions of the Galaxy that may favor the development of complex life. The Milky Way galaxy was modeled using a computational approach by populating stars and their planetary systems on an individual basis by employing Monte Carlo methods. We began with well-established properties of the disk of the Milky Way, such as the stellar number density distribution, the initial mass function, the star formation history, and the metallicity gradient as a function of radial position and time. We varied some of these properties and created four models to test the sensitivity of our assumptions. To assess habitability on the galactic scale, we modeled supernova rates, planet formation, and the time required for complex life to evolve. Our study has improved on other literature on the GHZ by populating stars on an individual basis and modeling Type II supernova (SNII) and Type Ia supernova (SNIa) sterilizations by selecting their progenitors from within this preexisting stellar population. Furthermore, we considered habitability on tidally locked and non-tidally locked planets separately and studied habitability as a function of height above and below the galactic midplane. In the model that most accurately reproduces the properties of the Galaxy, the results indicate that an individual SNIa is ∼5.6× more lethal than an individual SNII on average. In addition, we predict that ∼1.2% of all stars host a planet that may have been capable of supporting complex life at some point in the history of the Galaxy. Of those stars with a habitable planet, ∼75% of planets are predicted to be in a tidally locked configuration with their host star. The majority of these planets that may support complex life are found toward the inner Galaxy, distributed within, and significantly above and below, the galactic midplane.
我们提出了一个银河可居住区(GHZ)的模型,该模型描述了银河系的时空维度,这些维度可能有利于复杂生命的发展。通过采用蒙特卡罗方法,逐个为恒星及其行星系统赋以数值,我们利用计算方法对银河系进行建模。我们从银河系盘的一些已确立的特性开始,例如恒星数密度分布、初始质量函数、恒星形成历史以及金属丰度随径向位置和时间的梯度。我们改变了其中一些特性,并创建了四个模型来测试我们假设的敏感性。为了在银河尺度上评估可居住性,我们模拟了超新星爆发率、行星形成以及复杂生命进化所需的时间。通过从这个预先存在的恒星种群中选择它们的前身星,我们逐个为恒星建模,并对 II 型超新星(SNII)和 Ia 型超新星(SNIa)的杀菌作用进行建模,从而改进了其他关于 GHZ 的文献。此外,我们分别研究了潮汐锁定和非潮汐锁定行星的可居住性,并研究了可居住性作为高度的函数高于和低于银河中平面。在最准确地再现银河系特性的模型中,结果表明,单个 SNIa 的平均致死率比单个 SNII 高约 5.6 倍。此外,我们预测在银河系历史的某个时刻,所有恒星中约有 1.2%的恒星都有一个可能支持复杂生命的行星。在那些有可居住行星的恒星中,约 75%的行星与它们的主星处于潮汐锁定状态。这些可能支持复杂生命的大多数行星位于银河系内部,分布在银河中平面内部、上方和下方。