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Space & Physics

Did JWST detect “signs of life” in an alien planet?

The presence of an organic compound, dimethyl sulfide in an alien planet, has astronomers wondering whether they have indirectly confirmed life thriving outside our solar system.

Karthik Vinod

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Artistic illustration of a stylized alien planet | Credit: Bhautik Patel / Unsplash

On Wednesday, a paper published in the pre-print server, arXiv did the rounds on social media after its authors claimed possible signs of life in an alien planet.

Its host star system – K2-18 – is located some 125 light years away in the direction of Leo. In 2023, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) detected possible signs of an exotic rare organic molecule – dimethyl sulphide – in planet K2-18b’s atmosphere. Although evidence was not conclusive enough, scientists were intrigued. This is because on earth, dimethyl sulphide is produced in biochemical reactions occurring in living organisms. As such, astronomers have taken to pondering whether K2-18b has its own share of living organisms thriving today. But these remain speculations at best.

Separating fact from fiction

Astronomers contend dimethyl sulphide’s presence isn’t necessarily the smoking gun for biological life. There is too limited data for astronomers to ever settle on positively detecting a bio-signature. Our limited understanding of what life could look like also contributes to this uncertainty, since our assumption of what constitutes bio-signatures is biased to what conditions we expect to prevail on earth.

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“Phytoplankton – the foundation of the oceanic food chain,” | Credit: NOAA / Unsplash

Simpler life forms exhibit some versatility that complex organisms don’t show. For example, phytoplankton in marine environments are known to thrive in oxygen-deprived conditions. But in K2-18b’s atmosphere, dimethyl sulphide occurs at concentrations many times those present on earth. Scientists are blind to the nature of chemical reactions unfolding in the atmosphere in the first place.

As such, contending theories about the surface conditions prevailing on the planet remain. In one interpretation of the facts, studies predict the planet hosts a hospitable climate. Perhaps even with an ocean, going by the 2019 detection of water vapour in its atmosphere. That is, if temperatures on K2-18b are low enough, thanks to its optimal distance from its host star, which like our sun is a dwarf star, except slightly dimmer and redder in appearance. But then if another interpretation is to go by, then the surface must be subsumed by a lava ocean. Scientists are none the wiser about these facts either.

Worlds apart

Our state-of-the-art space telescopes themselves have limited ability to capture adequate signal. For one, the K2-18 star system and our earth are separated by about 125 light years. This is about a million times that of the distance between the earth and the sun. This leaves both the host star and the planet faint sources for even JWST’s sensitive detectors. But JWST compensates for this, tracking the planet’s transit across its host star – which luckily exists along our line of sight.

From this, astronomers can retrieve tell-tale signs of the planet’s chemical makeup. This is because some of the starlight grazes past the planet’s atmosphere before it reaches JWST’s sensors. But despite JWST’s powerful sensitivity, it would require a statistically large enough sample to easily discriminate against any noise backdrop surrounding the telescope. As such, it’s unclear whether the identified concentrations, not least the presence of dimethyl sulphide will hold validated in future observations of K2-18b.

Saying that, more sophisticated telescopes, such as NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, could possibly resolve any technical limitations to affirming presence of dimethyl sulphide in addition to other chemical compounds. Thereby precision science would unlock doors, making measurements precise and put hypotheses up to the challenge.

Space & Physics

Researchers Develop Stretchable Material That Can Instantly Switch How It Conducts Heat

MIT engineers have developed a stretchable material heat conduction system that can rapidly switch how heat flows, enabling adaptive cooling applications.

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Laboratory experiment showing a stretchable polymer fibre demonstrating stretchable material heat conduction as its thermal behaviour changes when the material is stretched.
Experiments show that a fibre made from a widely used polymer can reversibly change how it conducts heat when stretched. Image credit: Courtesy of the researchers/MIT

Stretchable material heat conduction has taken a major leap forward as engineers at MIT have developed a polymer that can rapidly and reversibly switch how it conducts heat simply by being stretched. The discovery opens new possibilities for adaptive cooling technologies in clothing, electronics, and building infrastructure.

Engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed a new polymer material that can rapidly and reversibly switch how it conducts heat—simply by being stretched.

The research shows that a commonly used soft polymer, known as an olefin block copolymer (OBC), can more than double its thermal conductivity when stretched, shifting from heat-handling behaviour similar to plastic to levels closer to marble. When the material relaxes back to its original form, its heat-conducting ability drops again, returning to its plastic-like state.

The transition happens extremely fast—within just 0.22 seconds—making it the fastest thermal switching ever observed in a material, according to the researchers.

The findings open up possibilities for adaptive materials that respond to temperature changes in real time, with potential applications ranging from cooling fabrics and wearable technology to electronics, buildings, and infrastructure.

A new direction for adaptive materials

“We need materials that are inexpensive, widely available, and able to adapt quickly to changing environmental temperatures,” said Svetlana Boriskina, principal research scientist in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, in a media statement. She explained that the discovery of rapid thermal switching in this polymer creates new opportunities to design materials that actively manage heat rather than passively resisting it.

The research team initially began studying the material while searching for more sustainable alternatives to spandex, a petroleum-based elastic fabric that is difficult to recycle. During mechanical testing, the researchers noticed unexpected changes in how the polymer handled heat as it was stretched and released.

“What caught our attention was that the material’s thermal conductivity increased when stretched and decreased again when relaxed, even after thousands of cycles,” said Duo Xu, a co-author of the study, in a media statement. He added that the effect was fully reversible and occurred while the material remained largely amorphous, which contradicted existing assumptions in polymer science.

The discovery demonstrates how stretchable material heat conduction can be actively controlled in real time, allowing materials to respond dynamically to temperature changes.

How stretching unlocks heat flow

At the microscopic level, most polymers consist of tangled chains of carbon atoms that block heat flow. The MIT team found that stretching the olefin block copolymer temporarily straightens these tangled chains and aligns small crystalline regions, creating clearer pathways for heat to travel through the material.

“This gives the material the ability to toggle its heat conduction thousands of times without degrading

Unlike earlier work on polyethylene—where similar alignment permanently increased thermal conductivity—the new material does not crystallise under strain. Instead, its internal structure switches back and forth between straightened and tangled states, allowing repeated and reversible thermal switching.

“This gives the material the ability to toggle its heat conduction thousands of times without degrading,” Xu said.

From smart clothing to cooler electronics

The researchers say the material could be engineered into fibres for clothing that normally retain heat but instantly dissipate excess warmth when stretched. Similar concepts could be applied to electronics, laptops, and buildings, where materials could respond dynamically to overheating without external cooling systems.

“The difference in heat dissipation is similar to the tactile difference between touching plastic and touching marble,” Boriskina said in a media statement, highlighting how noticeable the effect can be.

The team is now working on optimising the polymer’s internal structure and exploring related materials that could produce even larger thermal shifts.

“If we can further enhance this effect, the industrial and societal impact could be substantial,” Boriskina said.

Researchers say advances in stretchable material heat conduction could significantly influence future designs of smart textiles, electronics cooling, and energy-efficient buildings.

The study has been published in the journal Advanced Materials. The authors include researchers from MIT and the Southern University of Science and Technology in China.

Researchers say advances in stretchable material heat conduction could significantly influence future designs of smart textiles, electronics cooling, and energy-efficient buildings.

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Space & Physics

Physicists Capture ‘Wakes’ Left by Quarks in the Universe’s First Liquid

Scientists at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider have observed, for the first time, fluid-like wakes created by quarks moving through quark–gluon plasma, offering direct evidence that the universe’s earliest matter behaved like a liquid rather than a cloud of free particles.

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Physicists Capture ‘Wakes’ Left by Quarks in the Universe’s First Liquid
Image credit: Jose-Luis Olivares, MIT

Physicists working at the CERN(The European Organization for Nuclear Research) have reported the first direct experimental evidence that quark–gluon plasma—the primordial matter that filled the universe moments after the Big Bang—behaves like a true liquid.

Using heavy-ion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider, researchers recreated the extreme conditions of the early universe and observed that quarks moving through this plasma generate wake-like patterns, similar to ripples trailing a duck across water.

The study, led by physicists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, shows that the quark–gluon plasma responds collectively, flowing and splashing rather than scattering randomly.

“It has been a long debate in our field, on whether the plasma should respond to a quark,” said Yen-Jie Lee in a media statement. “Now we see the plasma is incredibly dense, such that it is able to slow down a quark, and produces splashes and swirls like a liquid. So quark-gluon plasma really is a primordial soup.”

Quark–gluon plasma is believed to be the first liquid to have existed in the universe and the hottest ever observed, reaching temperatures of several trillion degrees Celsius. It is also considered a near-perfect liquid, flowing with almost no resistance.

To isolate the wake produced by a single quark, the team developed a new experimental technique. Instead of tracking pairs of quarks and antiquarks—whose effects can overlap—they identified rare collision events that produced a single quark traveling in the opposite direction of a Z boson. Because a Z boson interacts weakly with its surroundings, it acts as a clean marker, allowing scientists to attribute any observed plasma ripples solely to the quark.

“We have figured out a new technique that allows us to see the effects of a single quark in the QGP, through a different pair of particles,” Lee said.

Analysing data from around 13 billion heavy-ion collisions, the researchers identified roughly 2,000 Z-boson events. In these cases, they consistently observed fluid-like swirls in the plasma opposite to the Z boson’s direction—clear signatures of quark-induced wakes.

The results align with theoretical predictions made by MIT physicist Krishna Rajagopal, whose hybrid model suggested that quarks should drag plasma along as they move through it.

“This is something that many of us have argued must be there for a good many years, and that many experiments have looked for,” Rajagopal said.

“We’ve gained the first direct evidence that the quark indeed drags more plasma with it as it travels,” Lee added. “This will enable us to study the properties and behavior of this exotic fluid in unprecedented detail.”

The research was carried out by members of the CMS Collaboration using the Compact Muon Solenoid detector at CERN. The open-access study has been published in the journal Physics Letters B.

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Space & Physics

Why Jupiter Has Eight Polar Storms — and Saturn Only One: MIT Study Offers New Clues

Two giant planets, made of the same elements, display radically different storms at their poles. New research from MIT now suggests that the key to this cosmic mystery lies not in the skies, but deep inside Jupiter and Saturn themselves.

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Why Jupiter Has Eight Polar Storms — and Saturn Only One: MIT Study Offers New Clues
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/ASI/INAF/JIRAM

For decades, spacecraft images of Jupiter and Saturn have puzzled planetary scientists. Despite being similar in size and composition, the two gas giants display dramatically different weather systems at their poles. Jupiter hosts a striking formation: a central polar vortex encircled by eight massive storms, resembling a rotating crown. Saturn, by contrast, is capped by a single enormous cyclone, shaped like a near-perfect hexagon.

Now, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology believe they have identified a key reason behind this cosmic contrast — and the answer may lie deep beneath the planets’ cloud tops.

In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the MIT team suggests that the structure of a planet’s interior — specifically, how “soft” or “hard” the base of a vortex is — determines whether polar storms merge into one giant system or remain as multiple smaller vortices.

“Our study shows that, depending on the interior properties and the softness of the bottom of the vortex, this will influence the kind of fluid pattern you observe at the surface,” says study author Wanying Kang, assistant professor in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS) in a media release issued by the institute. “I don’t think anyone’s made this connection between the surface fluid pattern and the interior properties of these planets. One possible scenario could be that Saturn has a harder bottom than Jupiter.”

A long-standing planetary mystery

The contrast has been visible for years thanks to two landmark NASA missions. The Juno spacecraft, which has been orbiting Jupiter since 2016, revealed a dramatic polar arrangement of swirling storms, each roughly 3,000 miles wide — nearly half the diameter of Earth. Cassini, which orbited Saturn for 13 years before its mission ended in 2017, documented the planet’s iconic hexagonal polar vortex, stretching nearly 18,000 miles across.

“People have spent a lot of time deciphering the differences between Jupiter and Saturn,” says Jiaru Shi, the study’s first author and an MIT graduate student. “The planets are about the same size and are both made mostly of hydrogen and helium. It’s unclear why their polar vortices are so different.”

Simulating storms on gas giants

To tackle the question, the researchers turned to computer simulations. They created a two-dimensional model of atmospheric flow designed to mimic how storms might evolve on a rapidly rotating gas giant.

While real planetary vortices are three-dimensional, the team argued that Jupiter’s and Saturn’s fast spin simplifies the physics. “In a fast-rotating system, fluid motion tends to be uniform along the rotating axis,” Kang explains. “So, we were motivated by this idea that we can reduce a 3D dynamical problem to a 2D problem because the fluid pattern does not change in 3D. This makes the problem hundreds of times faster and cheaper to simulate and study.”

The model allowed the scientists to test thousands of possible planetary conditions, varying factors such as rotation rate, internal heating, planet size and — crucially — the density of material beneath the vortices. Each simulation began with random chaotic motion and tracked how storms evolved over time.

The outcomes consistently fell into two categories: either the system developed one dominant polar vortex, like Saturn, or several coexisting vortices, like Jupiter.

The decisive factor turned out to be how much a vortex could grow before being constrained by the properties of the layers beneath it.

When the lower layers were made of softer, lighter material, individual vortices could not expand indefinitely. Instead, they stabilized at smaller sizes, allowing multiple storms to coexist at the pole. This matches what scientists observe on Jupiter.

But when the simulated vortex base was denser and more rigid, vortices were able to grow larger and eventually merge. The end result was a single, planet-scale storm — remarkably similar to Saturn’s massive polar cyclone.

“This equation has been used in many contexts, including to model midlatitude cyclones on Earth,” Kang says. “We adapted the equation to the polar regions of Jupiter and Saturn.”

The findings suggest that Saturn’s interior may contain heavier elements or more condensed material than Jupiter’s, giving its atmospheric vortices a firmer foundation to build upon.

“What we see from the surface, the fluid pattern on Jupiter and Saturn, may tell us something about the interior, like how soft the bottom is,” Shi says. “And that is important because maybe beneath Saturn’s surface, the interior is more metal-enriched and has more condensable material which allows it to provide stronger stratification than Jupiter. This would add to our understanding of these gas giants.”

Reading the interiors from the skies

Planetary scientists have long struggled to infer the internal structures of gas giants, where pressures and temperatures are far beyond what can be reproduced in laboratories. This new work offers a rare bridge between visible atmospheric patterns and hidden planetary composition.

Beyond explaining two of the Solar System’s most visually striking storms, the research could shape how scientists interpret observations of distant exoplanets as well — worlds where atmospheric patterns might be the only clues to what lies within.

For now, Jupiter’s swirling crown of storms and Saturn’s solitary hexagon may be doing more than decorating the poles of two distant giants. They may be quietly revealing the deep, unseen architecture of the planets themselves.

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