Newly discovered super-Earth orbits in and out of its star's habitable zone. Could life survive its extreme climate?

The climate on such a world must be beyond bizarre.

A blue haze partially covers the view of a large planet. A smaller orb, a star, passes in the upper left.
(Image credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO)

A super-Earth planet that dips in and out of its star's habitable zone has been discovered just 19.7 light-years away.

The planet, known as HD 20794d, gets farther out from its star than Mars is from the sun and, on the other end of its orbit, as close as Venus. Each orbit the planet begins out beyond the habitable zone, where it is too cold for liquid water, before passing right through the habitable zone to its inner edge where temperatures rise for a short period, before the planet moves back out again.

Astrobiology Magazine

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