Habitable Zone Planets

Wire sketch of two spheres, with one sphere twice the radius of another, with both spheres experiencing equivalent incident radiation
Levels
  • advanced
NGSS
  • ps3
  • ps4
  • ess2
Requirements
  • low_tech
  • low_cost
CreditAmerican Association of Physics Teachers
Language
  • english

This guided inquiry activity—along with follow-up exercises that can be done as homework—introduces students to various factors that influence the (average) surface temperature of a planet. Students determine the various factors that influence the average surface temperature of a planet using principles of blackbody radiation, equilibrium, albedo, and greenhouse gases. Students are guided to recognize the importance of the effect of greenhouse gases in elevating the average surface temperature of a planet like Earth. Students are also introduced to the “faint young Sun paradox”—how on an early Earth could liquid water have been present while the luminosity of the Sun was significantly less than it is currently—and to the possible resolution of that paradox by invoking greenhouse effects. Along the way, students are shown data collected on Earth-like exoplanets surveyed by the Kepler project. This activity is appropriate for university introductory physics. Use the Pre-Lecture Video to learn more about how to implement this activity.