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#Astronomers have discovered the first exoplanet with plate tectonics — Pangaea when?

#Astronomers have discovered the first exoplanet with plate tectonics — Pangaea when?

Like the volcano planet Mustafar from Star Wars, half of the exoplanet 3844b could be covered in active volcanoes. This planet, discovered in 2019, could be the first world we know, outside the solar system, to have plate tectonics, which guides much of geology on our own world.

On Earth, plate tectonics drives earthquakes and builds mighty mountains, and it ferries materials from beneath the surface of the Earth, expelling material to the crust and atmosphere. This movement of the crustal plates of Earth also plays a crucial role in the return of these materials back underground, completing the geological process.

This tectonic cycle, essential to driving climatic conditions on Earth, has never been observed in a world outside our solar system — until now.

Located just 45 light-years from Earth, LHS 3844b is thought to not have an atmosphere. This makes it slightly easier for astronomers to see tectonic processes taking place in this distant world. Even under the best of conditions, these measurements are right at the edge of technology.

“The first mission to Mars did not expect to find craters and river valleys, and yet they did. The first mission to Jupiter didn’t expect to find ocean worlds and volcano worlds, but they did.” — Alan Stern

This volcano planet, composed mostly of rock like our own world, is slightly larger than Earth.

This world orbits so close to its star that it is tidally locked — eternally facing one side toward its stellar parent, as the face on the Moon always points to Earth. Because of this, one side of LHS 3844b is constantly heated, while the other side remains perpetually frozen. While the sun-facing side of this world burns at temperatures of 800 degrees Celsius (1470 Fahrenheit), temperatures on the nightside drop to -250 C. (-420 F).

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