Space

Could violent stellar flares make planets more habitable?

Red star with many loops of bright material coming off it and a planet nearby with a tail of gases streaming away.
View larger. | This artist’s illustration depicts a highly active red dwarf star firing off such intense solar flares that it’s stripping the atmosphere from a nearby planet. It seems unlikely life could form on such a world. But a new study says violent stellar flares like these could sometimes actually improve the habitability of nearby worlds. Image via Wikipedia/ NASA/ ESA/ D. Player (STScI).
  • Powerful flares of radiation are frequent on small, low-mass stars. They could be dangerous for potential life on rocky planets.
  • But those same flares could also make these planets more habitable, by extending a region around the star where ultraviolet radiation works to life’s advantage.
  • This so-called ultraviolet habitable zone sometimes overlaps with the region around a star where liquid water can exist. These regions could provide great conditions for life to develop.

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Could violent stellar flares make planets more habitable?

Small, low-mass stars such as red dwarfs are well-known for blasting out powerful flares. And when they do, they send waves of radiation rippling out into space. It’s long been suspected these flares might prevent the development of life on surrounding planets. But on April 6, 2026, researchers said these flares could actually improve the habitability of planets orbiting small stars.

The research centers on the idea of habitable zones. This term usually refers to the region around a star where liquid water can exist. But scientists also talk of an ultraviolet habitable zone. That’s the region around a star where there’s enough ultraviolet radiation to potentially kick-start life-forming chemical reactions, but not so much that it will destroy any DNA.

The new paper suggests that solar flares from a small star could expand this ultraviolet habitable zone. Plus, it reveals that the ultraviolet habitable zone can sometimes overlap with the liquid water habitable zone, creating a promising region for habitable worlds.

Laurence Tognetti wrote about the intriguing new findings in Universe Today on April 22, 2026.

The researchers published their peer-reviewed findings in the journal The Innovation on April 6, 2026.

Stellar flares may expand habitable zones around small stars The search for life beyond Earth has traditionally focused on exoplanets orbiting sun-like stars, which is a G-type star. However, low-m…#Planetary #SciencesOrigin | Interest | Match

Exoplanets (@exoplanets.activitypub.awakari.com.ap.brid.gy) 2026-04-22T19:00:05.000Z

There’s more than 1 kind of habitable zone

Most studies have focused only on the “traditional” habitable zone: the region around a star where liquid water can exist. But now this new study incorporates both kinds. The paper says:

The traditional definition of the circumstellar habitable zone focuses on liquid water, but neglects the crucial role of ultraviolet radiation in prebiotic chemistry.

In other words, the researchers think astronomers are overlooking the fact that ultraviolet radiation could potentially drive chemical reactions that lead to life sparking.

For this study, the researchers considered both types of habitable zone. They wanted to see if increased solar flare activity could affect the size of the ultraviolet habitable zone. That would let them evaluate how much the stellar activity of low-mass stars contributes to this region. They could then compare this to the size of liquid water habitable zones, and see if the two often overlap.

Flares extend habitable zones: Complicated diagram of arcs around a star. 1 green arc with simple molecules and a blue arc with complex ones.
View larger. | Illustration of both the liquid water habitable zone and ultraviolet habitable zone around a small, low-mass star. On the right, the ultraviolet habitable zone is enlarged by the violent stellar flaring. Image via Gao et al./ The Innovation.

Stellar flares could provide life-giving radiation

Flares are typically thought of as dangerous for habitable planets, and rightly so. If a planet is too close to its star, flares and the stellar wind could strip the planet of its atmosphere if it has one.

But it seems that – in the right circumstances – flares could actually help habitability by extending what’s known as the ultraviolet habitable zone. Generally, low-mass stars don’t emit enough ultraviolet radiation to help drive the early chemistry of life. But periodic increased flare activity could provide enough radiation, the researchers found.

The study focused on 9 exoplanets

Altogether, the researchers applied the model to nine exoplanets. Eight are rocky, and one is a Neptune-type planet. All orbit M-type or K-type stars. M-type stars (red dwarfs) are low-mass red stars, while K-type stars are low-mass orange dwarf stars.

The M-types comprise about 70% of all the stars in our galaxy. Perhaps the most well-known planetary system around an M-type red dwarf star is the TRAPPIST-1 system. No less than seven rocky, near-Earth-sized planets are known to orbit that star. Three of the planets orbit within the liquid water habitable zone.

Orbit-like circles around a star, the middle one green, and an Earth-sized planet in it labeled Just Right.
The well-known habitable zone, also known as the liquid water habitable zone. But stars also have an ultraviolet habitable zone. Image via NASA.

The 2 habitable zones can overlap

Notably, the researchers found that the two kinds of habitable zones can overlap. And three of the nine planets in the study – KOI-8012.01, KOI-8047.01 and KOI-7703.01 – orbited within both zones. That’s promising, although it doesn’t guarantee that any of those planets are habitable. Only further observations can help determine if they are capable of supporting life or not.

Large blue planet seen from behind, with smaller planet crossing a red sun-like star.
Artist’s illustration of a super-Earth exoplanet close to its red dwarf star. Image via C. Lionel/ University of Liège. Used with permission.

A step toward finding habitable exoplanets

Habitability can depend on various factors, including water, temperature, active geology, atmospheric composition, and internal composition of the planet. But identifying the characteristics of both habitable zones is a good step toward finding habitable exoplanets.

The paper states:

Although many exoplanets have been studied statistically, assessing the habitability of individual planets in the habitable zone is still challenging from both astrobiological and observational perspectives. Evaluating habitable zones around stars in various aspects helps us better understand exoplanet habitability. By reevaluating the habitable zones and creating a comprehensive catalog of planets within them, we can infer that terrestrial planets in both liquid water and UV radiation habitable zones are more likely to support life.

Bottom line: Could violent stellar flares actually make planets more habitable? A new study into ultraviolet habitable zones around small, low-mass stars says yes.

Source: Flare-driven habitability: Expanding life’s potential around low-mass stars

Via Universe Today

Read more: Small planets are common around small stars, says new study

Read more: New survey of nearest stars reveals best spots for life

Posted 
May 5, 2026
 in 
Space

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