Hypothetical type of tidally locked planet with spatial features resembling an eyeball
This article is missing information about more recent modelling of tidally locked worlds disfavoring the formation of eyeball planets in a majority of cases. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(April 2024)
Example of a "hot" eyeball planet's spatial features, with a scalded side facing the star and water on the other side
Example of a "cold" eyeball planet's spatial features, with an ice shell pierced by an ocean on the side facing the star
An eyeball planet is a hypothetical type of tidally lockedplanet, for which tidal locking induces spatial features (for example in the geography or composition of the planet) resembling an eyeball.[1] They are terrestrial planets where liquids may be present, in which tidal locking will induce a spatially dependent temperature gradient (the planet will be hotter on the side facing the star and colder on the other side). This temperature gradient may therefore limit the places in which liquid may exist on the surface of the planet to ring- or disk-shaped areas.
Such planets are further divided into "hot" and "cold" types, depending on which side of the planet the liquid is present. A "hot" eyeball planet is usually closer to its host star, and the centre of the "eye", facing the star (day side), is made of rock while liquid is present on the opposite side (night side). A "cold" eyeball planet, usually farther from the star, will have liquid on the side facing the host star while the rest of its surface is made of ice and rocks.[citation needed]
Because most planetary bodies have a natural tendency toward becoming tidally locked to their host body for a long enough timeline, eyeball planets may be common and could host life, particularly in planetary systems orbiting red and brown dwarf stars which have lifespans much longer than other main-sequence stars.[2]
Potential candidates
Kepler-1652b is potentially an eyeball planet.[3] The TRAPPIST-1 system may contain several such planets.[4]
According to the observations of the James Webb Space Telescope in 2024, the super-Earth[a] planet LHS 1140b might either have a thin ice shell with a subsurface ocean or an icy surface covered partially in liquid water, the latter of which is an attribute of "cold" eyeball planet.[5]
See also
Linear settlement – a type of settlement that could be set up on such planets