Not every place within a galaxy experiences the same conditions for  habitability - some parts are lethal thanks to supernovae, whilst others  do not possess enough heavy elements to allow rocky planets and life to  develop. Credit: The Hubble Heritage Team, AURA/STScI/NASA
We know for certain that life exists in the Milky Way galaxy:  that life is us. Scientists are continually looking to understand more  about how life on our planet came to be and the conditions that must be  met for its survival, and whether those conditions can be replicated  elsewhere in the Universe. It turns out that looking at our entire  Galaxy, rather than focusing just on life-giving properties of our  planet or indeed the habitability of regions of our own Solar System, is  a good place to start.  
How far our planet orbits from the Sun, along with other factors such as atmospheric composition, a carbon cycle  and the existence of water, has told astronomers much about the  conditions that are required for life to not only originate, but to  survive on rocky worlds. 
This distance from a star is referred to, quite  simply, as the ‘Habitable Zone’ or sometimes the ‘Goldilocks Zone’  because conditions here are neither too hot or too cold for water to be  liquid on the planet’s surface -- conditions just right for life as we  know it to thrive. 
Copernican theory tells us that our world is a typical rocky planet  in a typical planetary system. This concept has spurred some astronomers  to start thinking bigger, way beyond the simplicity of any one  planetary system and instead towards much grander scales. Astronomers  are exploring whether there is a Galactic Habitable Zone (GHZ) in our  Galaxy – a region of the Milky Way that is conducive to forming  planetary systems with habitable worlds. The Galactic Habitable Zone  implies that if there are conditions just right for a planet around a  star, then the same must go for a galaxy.  
 This concept was first introduced by geologist and paleontologist  Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee, an astronomer and astrobiologist, in  their book, ‘Rare Earth’. The idea of a GHZ served as an antagonistic  view point to the Copernican principle. 
Despite scientists such as Carl  Sagan and Frank Drake favoring the theory of mediocrity based on the  Copernican model, which supports the probability of the Universe hosting other forms of complex life,  Ward and Brownlee were certain our Earth and the conditions within our  Galaxy that allowed such life to evolve are both extremely rare. 
Their  answer to the famous Fermi paradox – if extraterrestrial aliens are  common, why is their existence not obvious? – is that alien life more  complex than microbes is not very common at all, requiring a number of  factors, each of low possibility, to come into play. In short, Ward and  Brownlee were suggesting that much of the Galaxy was inhospitable to  complex life. In their view, only a narrow belt around the Galaxy was  fertile: the Galactic Habitable Zone.  
Since then, many astronomers have looked at the idea of the GHZ. Not  all believe that it necessarily supports Ward and Brownlee’s Rare Earth  hypothesis. 
 One recent assessment of the GHZ, by Michael Gowanlock of NASA’s  Astrobiology Institute, and his Trent University colleagues David Patton  and Sabine McConnell, has suggested that while the inner sector of the MIlky Way Galaxy may be the most dangerous, it is also most likely to support habitable worlds. 
Their paper, accepted for publication in the journal Astrobiology, modeled habitability  in the Milky Way based on three factors: supernova rates, metallicity  (the abundance of heavy elements, used as a proxy for planet formation)  and the time taken for complex life to evolve. They found that although  the greater density of stars in the inner galaxy (out to a distance of  8,100 light years from the galactic center) meant that more supernovae  exploded, with more planets becoming sterilized by the radiation from  these exploding stars, the chances of finding a habitable planet there  was ten times more likely than in the outer Galaxy. 
This contradicts previous studies that, for example, suggested the  GHZ to be a belt around the Galaxy between distances of 22,800 light  years (7 kiloparsecs) and 29,300 light years (9 kiloparsecs) from the  galactic center. What’s noticeable is that our Sun orbits the Galaxy at a  distance of about 26,000 light years (8 kiloparsecs) – far outside GHZ  proposed by Gowanlock’s team. Why is their proposed galactic habitable  zone so different? 
“We assume that metallicity scales with planet formation,” says  Gowanlock. Heavy elements are produced by dying stars, and the more  generations of stars there have been, the greater the production of  these elements (or ‘metals’ as they are termed by astronomers).  Historically, the greatest amount of star formation has occurred in the  inner region of the Milky Way. “The inner Galaxy is the most metal-rich,  and the outer Galaxy is the most metal-poor. Therefore the number of  planets is highest in the inner Galaxy, as the metallicity and stellar  density is the highest in this region.”  
    A supernova sterilizes an alien world in this artist's impression. Credit: David A Aguilar (CfA)
However, amongst so much star formation lurks a danger: supernovae.  Gowanlock’s team modeled the effects of the two most common forms of  supernovae – the accreting white dwarfs that produce type Ia supernovae,  and the collapsing massive stars of type II supernovae. 
Measurements of the galactic abundance of the isotope aluminum-26,  which is a common by-product of type II supernovae, have allowed  astronomers to ascertain that a supernova explodes on average once every  50 years. Meanwhile, previous studies have indicated that a supernova  can have a deleterious effect on any habitable planet within 30 light  years. 
“In our model, we assume that the build-up of oxygen and the ozone  layer is required for the emergence of complex life,” says Gowanlock.  “Supernovae can deplete the ozone in an atmosphere. Therefore, the survival  of land-based complex life is at risk when a nearby supernova  sufficiently depletes a great fraction of the ozone in a planet's  atmosphere.” 
The team discovered that at some time in their lives, the majority of  stars in our Galaxy will be bathed in the radiation from a nearby  supernova, whereas around 30% of stars remain untouched or unsterilized.  “Sterilization occurs on a planet that is roughly [at a distance]  between 6.5 to 98 light years,  depending on the supernovae,” says Gowanlock. “In our model, the  sterilization distances are not equal, as some supernovae are more  lethal than others.” 
Although the outer regions of the Galaxy, with their lower density of  stars and fewer supernovae, are generally safer, the higher metallicity  in the inner Galaxy means that the chances of finding an unsterilized,  habitable world are ten times greater, according to Gowanlock’s model.  However, their model does not stipulate any region of the Galaxy to be  uninhabitable, only that it’s less likely to find habitable planets  elsewhere. 
 This explains why our Solar System can reside far outside of the  inner region, and it also gives hope to SETI – Gowanlock’s model  proposes that there are regions of the Galaxy even more likely to have  life, and many SETI searches are already targeted towards the galactic  center. 
However, not all are in favor of the new model. Ward and Brownlee  noted that the Sun’s position in the Galaxy is far more favorable  because planets that dance around stars that are too close to the  galactic center are more likely to suffer from a perturbed orbit by the  gravity of another star that has wandered too close. Others question  some of the assumptions made in the research, such as the accuracy of  the percentage of planets that are habitable in the galaxy (1.2  percent), or that tidally-locked worlds can be habitable. 
 An artist's impression of a potentially habitable planet around a  Sun-like star. The habitability of such worlds not only depends on  conditions on the planet and its distance from the star, but may also  depend on where in the Galaxy it is located. Credit: ESO/M Kornmesser
“The authors may be making some assumptions that aren’t too well  justified,” says Professor Jim Kasting of Penn State University and  author of How to Find a Habitable Planet. “They seem well ahead of the  rest of us who are still pondering these questions.” 
However, others believe that the research is promising. “This is one of the most complete studies of the Galactic Habitable Zone  to date,” says Lewis Dartnell, an astrobiologist at University College  London. “The results are intriguing, finding that white dwarf supernovae  are over five times more lethal to complex life on habitable worlds  than core collapse supernovae.” 
The GHZ isn’t static; the research paper written by Gowanlock’s team  points out that over time the metallicity of the Galaxy will begin to  increase the farther out one travels from the galactic center. 
 “This is why stars that form at a later date have a greater chance of  having terrestrial planets,” says Gowanlock. As a result, perhaps the  heyday for life in our Galaxy is yet to come.
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