NASA identifies 17 planets with possible subsurface oceans, and they could be fit for life

A new NASA survey identified 17 exoplanets that may have the right conditions for liquid water oceans hidden beneath icy shells. The planets could be good candidates in the search for alien life.

An artist's illustration of Proxima Centauri b, one of the watery exoplanet candidates.
An artist's illustration of Proxima Centauri b, one of the watery exoplanet candidates.
(Image credit: ESO/M. KORNMESSER)

As far as we know, life needs water.

Due to this simple truth, astronomers and astrobiologists have naturally focused their efforts on identifying exoplanets that might harbor liquid oceans. Water in its liquid form can exist on a planet's surface, where direct heat from its host star can keep the substance from freezing — but it can also exist  beneath a planet's surface, where internal sources of heat can sustain flowing, subsurface oceans.

Conor Feehly is a New Zealand-based science writer. He has earned a master's in science communication from the University of Otago, Dunedin. His writing has appeared in Cosmos Magazine, Discover Magazine and ScienceAlert. His writing largely covers topics relating to neuroscience and psychology, although he also enjoys writing about a number of scientific subjects ranging from astrophysics to archaeology.