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How Mars Can Help Us Understand ‘Marginal’ Exoplanets
Mars holds a special place in the Solar System. It represents marginal habitability. This means it transitioned from warm and wet and potentially hospitable, to cold and dry and inhospitable.
What can its transition tell us about exoplanet habitability?
New research to be published in the Planetary Science Journal examines the question. It’s titled “Mars as an Exoplanet: Lessons from a Planet at the Edge of Habitability.” The lead author is Stephen Kane, Professor of Planetary Astrophysics in the Earth & Planetary Sciences Dept. at the University of California, Riverside. The research is currently available at arxiv.org.
“Mars is the Solar System’s canonical small, rocky planet that transitioned from early geologic activity and surface liquid water to a cold and arid planet with a thin, cold, CO-dominated atmosphere,” the authors write. “The evolution of Mars, in the context of such planetary parameters as size, mass, atmosphere, insolation flux, magnetosphere, and impact history, harbor important diagnostics regarding the development and sustainability of habitable surface conditions.”
*This figure shows the planetary mass and radius data for confirmed exoplanets that have measurements extracted for both properties, extracted from the NASA Exoplanet Archive on 2025, December 31. The data are color-coded in proportion to the flux received from their host stars. The Solar System terrestrial planets are shown as stars. The shaded region indicates the sub-Earth regime. Image Credit: Kane et al. 2026. PSJ*
Our understanding of the exoplanet population has grown enormously in recent years. In exoplanet surveys, small rocky worlds are common and outnumber larger gas planets. But while we know they exist in large numbers, we lack a detailed understanding of their climates, their volatile budgets, and their long-term potential for habitability. According to the authors, Mars can help us understand its exoplanet cousins.
They point out that though size is a basic property of rocky planets, and a good starting point for understanding them, it doesn’t dictate how a planet evolves. “Venus, Earth, Mars, and even the Moon each underwent distinct volatile, tectonic, and atmospheric trajectories despite sharing the same stellar environment, illustrating that planet size alone does not uniquely determine planetary evolution,” they explain.
In this research, the authors synthesize research into how different aspects of Mars—including volatile delivery and loss, photochemistry, climate evolution, magnetism, and other factors—can help our overall understanding of exoplanets and their processes.
“Exoplanet studies often use Earth properties as standard units of measurements, particularly for those relevant to describing the capabilities of exoplanet detection
methods,” the authors write. Mars has many similar properties to Earth, but its diffferences are what’s important in this work.
*These schematic cross sections of Earth and Mars show the major internal components and atmospheric components to scale. For simplicity, oceanic and continental crust for Earth are not distinguished, nor is the interior structure of Earth’s mantle shown. Image Credit: Kane et al. 2026. PSJ*
First of all, Mars formed differently from Earth. It’s formation was rapid at first, then stalled at a sub-Earth mass. The authors describe it as a “stranded planetary embryo” instead of the result of later giant impacts.
The planet’s mass is important in its evolution, which isn’t surprising. “Mars occupies an important position in comparative planetology, since it is both a geologically rich world with a documented history of surface habitability, and a representative example of how small rocky planets can evolve toward atmospheric loss and climatic decline,” they write.
Mars can serve as a framework for understanding rocky exoplanets. One of the main conclusions is that Mars shows how planetary habitability isn’t a static condition. The authors describe it as “a time-dependent outcome governed by competing processes.”
For example, early Mars was volcanic, and released volatiles built up a thick atmosphere that trapped heat. But as its interior cooled and its dynamo stopped, atmospheric escape led to cooling and eventual loss of habitability. “These coupled processes can define a pathway that may be common for Mars-mass planets,” the authors write.
According to our understanding of Mars, habitability is likely to be fleeting more often than not, and Earth shines as a rare example of long-term habitability. “In
this context, Mars represents the edge of the habitable regime, being large enough to host transiently clement conditions, but small enough that atmospheric retention
and replenishment and long-term climate regulation are not guaranteed,” the authors write.
While Mars-mass planets are widely detected, there are shortcoming in those observations. “Our discussion of exoplanet demographics have shown that, while terrestrial-size planets are abundant, confirmed Mars-mass planets with well-constrained masses and radii remain relatively rare, largely due to detection shortcomings,” the authors write. That will change when the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope and its microlensing survey goes live.
As we discover more Mars-mass planets with well-measured constraints, we’re also developing future telescopes that get better at observing exoplanets. “Direct imaging and thermal emission studies, particularly with next-generation facilities, will ultimately determine whether such planets commonly retain thin CO2 atmospheres, undergo desiccation, or exhibit transient volatile cycles,” the researchers explain.
The key idea is that scientists can use what they learn about Mars to understand these observations. “Mars missions will continue to measure atmospheric escape rates, volatile inventories, and climate feedbacks with a level of detail unattainable for exoplanets, while exoplanet surveys contextualize Mars within a broader statistical population,” the authors write.
The researchers explain that as Mars exploration and exoplanet characterization converge, it will deliver an effective new way to better understand the large numbers of small rocky worlds. Scientists will better understand key properties of exoplanets, like the mass necessary to sustain geological activity like plate tectonics. They’ll also develop a better understanding the stellar environment and how it shapes atmospheric survival, as well as other planetary characteristics that shape habitability.
“Within this framework, Mars provides a fundamental benchmark for evaluating the diversity, evolution, and potential habitability of rocky planets throughout the Galaxy,” the authors conclude.
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Southern California should get more of its water locally, groups say
A coalition of conservation groups wants Southern California to get 85% of its water locally, up from the 50% it gets now, by 2045, and says a new plan shows how.
It’s urging state leaders to scrap plans for a 45-mile tunnel beneath the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta and consider asking voters to approve a bond measure to fund local water solutions. The 34-page strategy was released as critical decisions loom for local officials, California’s next governor and legislators.
Over the last century, Southern California has grown and thrived thanks to giant aqueducts it built to bring water from hundreds of miles away — the Eastern Sierra, the Colorado River and Northern California.
But with water costs rising and climate change jeopardizing these distant sources, there is growing interest in finding ways to get more water locally.
The allied groups are calling for recycling more wastewater, capturing more stormwater, improving efficiency and cleaning up contaminated groundwater.
“We have to prioritize our investments, and prioritizing them in local water makes the most sense,” said Bruce Reznik, executive director of the group Los Angeles Waterkeeper.
The coalition includes fishing groups, environmental organizations and Northern California’s Winnemem Wintu Tribe.
Its plan calls for a “new urban water renaissance” in California that prioritizes local water. This approach would reliably yield more and cost far less than Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed Delta Conveyance Project beneath the Delta.
The state estimated in 2024 the tunnel would cost $20.1 billion, but opponents say it could cost three to five times more.
“Local water is reliable, it’s more affordable, and it’s more flexible, so that we’re not committing California ratepayers to higher bills that they don’t need,” said Kyle Jones, a water expert and consultant who helped prepare the plan for the coalition.
Southern California imports about half of its water from other regions.
The coalition’s plan says the region can secure up to 2 million acre-feet of local water per year. It estimates the costs of more conservation and efficiency, more stormwater and groundwater cleaning, and more water recycling at $44 billion over two decades. The Delta tunnel, in contrast, could cost $60 billion to $100 billion, it says.
Whether the tunnel project is ultimately built may hinge on whether large water agencies, including the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, decide to participate and pay for it.
1. Cranes rise above the Donald C. Tillman Water Reclamation Plant in Van Nuys. 2. When completed, Los Angeles will nearly double recycled water for 500,000 residents. 3. Storage tanks sit behind a fence before being placed in the ground at the plant. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
“Metropolitan Water District really does have a significant choice on it, that not just impacts their ratepayers but impacts every single person in the state,” said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, executive director of the group Restore the Delta. “Are we going to spend $20, $60, maybe upward to $100 million on a tunnel? Or are we going to invest significant money in local solutions that provide water resiliency and sustainability for everyone in California? That is what is at stake right now.”
The Metropolitan Water District already is planning a large new facility in Carson to transform wastewater into purified drinking water. Los Angeles and San Diego are also building water recycling plants.
“At the same time, water imported from the northern Sierra and the Colorado River provides the foundation of water supply reliability for Southern California,” said Shivaji Deshmukh, the MWD’s general manager.
He noted that the MWD invests in water efficiency and capturing stormwater, and has helped reduce per-person water use by more than 40% since 1990.
The agency’s 38-member board last year adopted a climate adaptation strategy that sets goals for lining up additional water.
Los Angeles city leaders and L.A. County supervisors have also set goals for becoming more locally self-sufficient.
The advocates who wrote the policy plan said these efforts should accelerate and expand. They pointed out that the Colorado River’s reservoirs are falling to perilously low levels, and native fish in the Delta are in decline as the pumping of water takes an ecological toll.
“Climate change is exacerbating the challenges in those ecosystems, meaning that less and less water will be available to import,” said Ashley Overhouse, water policy advisor for the group Defenders of Wildlife. “All the while, the cost of water is continuing to rise.”
About 20 other environmental groups endorsed the coalition’s strategy.
“We have got to do a better job in the next 100 years than we did in the last 100 years, if we truly want to create a place of abundance once again,” said Frankie Myers, a member of the Yurok Tribe in Northern California. “This idea that we can steal … and divert water however we want with no consequences has got to end.”
Construction continues at the Donald C. Tillman Water Reclamation Plant in Van Nuys in October 2025.
(Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)
Benjamin Bass, a UCLA scientist who studies how climate change is affecting the Colorado River and other water sources, joined the group as they presented their proposal in an online briefing.
“Traditional sources for imported water are less reliable than they used to be,” Bass said. “The most reliable source of water in the future is local water.”
Other experts have reached similar conclusions.
Researchers at the Pacific Institute, a water think tank in Oakland, have examined improvements such as fixing leaks in pipes, switching out inefficient washing machines and toilets, and replacing thirsty lawns with plants suited to the state’s Mediterranean climate.
In a 2022 report, they found that a set of standard practices and technologies could reduce total urban water use by 30% or more.
News
Toshifumi Suzuki, Who Made 7-Eleven a Giant in Japan, Dies at 93
He spent four decades building the convenience store chain into a cornerstone of daily life.
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A Brief-ish History of SETI. Part VII: Brief Windows and Transcendence
Welcome back to our continuing series on the Brief-ish History of SETI. In our previous installments, we looked at the early history and the first experiments in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI), followed by the first example of a modern SETI survey (Project Ozma) led by famed Cornell professor Frank Drake, the Drake Equation, and the enduring legacy of both. This was followed by some of the most enduring theories about what advanced civilizations might look like, including our own someday.
Next, we examined the first attempt at Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence (METI) and what is still considered the best candidate for an extraterrestrial signal (the Arecibo Message and the WOW! Signal), followed by the first physical message sent to interstellar space. And in our last installment, we examined two fundamental (and related) theories on why humanity has neither seen nor heard from an advanced extraterrestrial civilization (ETC), and the possible implications for humanity.
Today, we will examine some of the more practical suggestions as to why humanity has neither seen nor heard from an advanced extraterrestrial civilization (ETC), consistent with many of the arguments Sagan and Newman argued in their seminal paper (nicknamed “Sagan’s Response“). We’ll also examine some of the most mind-blowing and exotic explanations that take the concept of advancement in a whole different direction (and a whole different level!).
The Longevity Factor
First up, there’s what this author likes to call the “Brief Window Hypothesis,” a proposed resolution to the Fermi Paradox that takes its cue from Frank Drake himself and from what he claimed was the most important parameter in his famous equation. This was none other than the time an extraterrestrial would have to transmit messages into space (L), otherwise known as the longevity factor. Basically, Drake posited that the lifetime of a civilization is finite, which was inspired by the very real possibility of nuclear annihilation during the Cold War.
This parameter has also inspired proposed resolutions to Fermi’s Paradox. One of the earliest examples came from German astrophysicist and radio astronomer Sebastian von Hoerner, a colleague of Frank Drake’s who participated in Project Ozma. In 1961, he penned a paper titled “The Search for Signals from Other Civilizations,” in which he argued that the existential window of a technologically-advanced civilization might be too short relative to the time it would take to make contact with another intelligent species. As he wrote:
We should not underestimate the power of two critical factors that can terminate the life of a civilization once the technical state has been reached. Science and technology have been brought forward (not entirely, but to a high degree) by the fight for supremacy and the desire for an easy life.
Both of these driving forces tend to destroy if they are not controlled in time: the first one leads to total destruction, and the second one leads to biological or mental degeneration. In summary, we assume that a state of mind not too different from our own will have developed at many places but will have only a limited longevity.
Another issue with most proposed resolutions to Fermi’s Paradox is the inherent assumption that advanced civilizations will experience exponential growth. In contrast, some researchers have presented scenarios in which ETIs were unable to sustain this growth pattern, which is why none have succeeded in becoming a galactic civilization. In 2009, Jacob D. Haqq-Misra of the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science (BMSIS) and Seth D. Baum of the Global Catastrophic Risk Institute (GCRI) argued this very point in a study titled “The Sustainability Solution to the Fermi Paradox.”
Essentially, they ventured that “[t]he absence of ETI observation can be explained by the possibility that exponential or other faster-growth is not a sustainable development pattern for intelligent civilizations.” Drawing on lessons from human history, Haqq-Misra and Baum showed that exponential growth has been a common feature, often to the detriment of the civilizations involved. This has led geologists to coin the term “Anthropocene,” which acknowledges that humanity is currently the single greatest determining factor in Earth’s evolution.
When applied to exo-civilizations, they claimed, the same tendency could explain why we don’t hear from aliens:
The Fermi Paradox ultimately concerns the spatial expansion of civilizations, but spatial expansion is closely linked with expansion in population, environmental impact, and resource consumption. For example, migration is often driven by resource shortages, which in turn may result from large population and/or environmental degradation. Likewise, migration to uninhabited regions can lead to resource surpluses, which can in turn drive population growth. Finally, [a] broadly expansionist policy can cause expansion in each of space, population, environmental impact, and resource consumption.
Another example comes from a 2018 book titled Light of the Stars: Alien Worlds and the Fate of the Earth, by astrophysicist Prof. Adam Frank. This work also drew on his 2018 study, “The Anthropocene Generalized: Evolution of Exo-Civilizations and Their Planetary Feedback,” which Frank conducted with an international team of colleagues. In both cases, Frank argued that the Anthropocene could offer a resolution to the Fermi Paradox by framing sustainability as a counterargument to exponential growth. Citing the Drake Equation, Frank stressed the following:
Earth is not unique. Even if, for example, Pc [the probability of a civilization arising on a habitable zone planet] were as low as 10-19, the number of technological civilizations like our own across the history of the visible Universe would still be large enough (Nc~1000) for statistically meaningful average properties of exo-civilizations to exist.
These average properties include, the average lifetime of a technological civilization. We note that represents the final factor in the Drake equation and, therefore, has a long history within the debate concerning exo-civilizations. Its importance for issues of sustainability are straightforward.
Other research has focused on the possibility that the window itself might be a function of distance, and civilizations that send out signals are unlikely to live long enough to get a response. This argument was made by Claudio Grimaldi and a team of scientists – including Dr. Frank Drake – in a 2018 study titled “Area Coverage of Expanding E.T. Signals in the Galaxy: SETI and Drake’s N.” where they made two key assumptions about the Drake Equation. First, they posited that ETIs emerge in our galaxy (N) at a constant rate. Second, they’ll only be able to send transmissions for a certain amount of time before they go extinct.
Long after these civilizations have died, these broadcasts will keep traveling outward at the speed of light (c). They would form an annulus (a donut-shaped wavefront) within which the radio signals would be detectable. The thickness of each annulus’ walls (measured in light-years) will correspond to how many years the civilization was able to broadcast radio signals to space before going silent. Two cases emerged based on the radiation shells being (1) thinner or (2) thicker than the diameter of the Milky Way (~100,000 light-years).
This is relative to the assumed lifetimes of advanced civilizations, which could be shorter or longer than the time it takes light to cross our entire galaxy (~100,000 years). In the first case, each annulus wall would be smaller than our galaxy and only fill a fraction of it, reducing the chance of a SETI detection. But depending on how often civilizations emerge, they found, these rings might fill our galaxy with signals and even overlap. In the second case, a ring would be thicker than our galaxy, but detection would depend on how many civilizations are broadcasting.
In the end, Grimaldi, Drake, and their colleagues found that the number of signals reaching Earth would be about the same in both cases. However, assuming that civilizations live for less than ~100,000 years, they determined that “the transmissions arriving at Earth may come from distant civilizations long extinct, while civilizations still alive are sending signals yet to arrive.” In other words, by the time humanity receives a message from an advanced civilization, that civilization would already be dead!
The Coming Singularity
Similarly, researchers have offered a reinterpretation of the longevity factor by citing the concept of the Technological Singularity. This concept is traced back to the famed Hungarian-American mathematician and physicist John von Neumann, who is also credited with the idea of self-replicating machines (aka. “Universal Constructors” or von Neumann probes). In 1958, his longtime colleague Stanislaw Ulam penned an essay, “John von Neumann (1903–1957),” in which he recounted a conversation the two once had concerning the changing pace of technological change:
“One conversation centered on the ever-accelerating progress of technology and changes in the mode of human life, which gives the appearance of approaching some essential singularity in the history of the race beyond which human affairs, as we know them, could not continue.”
The term has been popularized by authors such as Vernor Vinge, a former professor of computer science at San Diego State University (SDSU), and by computer scientist, author, futurist, and entrepreneur Ray Kurzweil. In 1993, Vinge wrote an essay titled “The Coming Technological Singularity,” in which he formalized arguments made previously in a presentation at the VISION-21 Symposium, sponsored by NASA Lewis Research Center and the Ohio Aerospace Institute. Central to both was Vinge’s assertion that humanity was on the verge of a major transformation resulting from the “imminent creation by technology of entities with greater-than-human intelligence.”
He further predicted that this transformation would occur between 2005 and 2030 and could be due to any of the following causes:
- *Computers that are “awake” and superhumanly intelligent*
- *Large computer networks and their associated users*
- *Computer/human interfaces that allow users to be considered superhumanly intelligent*
- *Biological science leading to improved natural human intellect*
Similar arguments were made by Jodrell Bank Center for Astrophysics Director Michael A. Garretta, who is also the Sir Bernard Lovell Chair of Astrophysics at the University of Manchester. In a 2025 paper titled “Blink and you’ll miss it – How Technological Acceleration Shrinks SETI’s Narrow Detection Window,” he revisited the “communication horizon” argument made by Carl Sagan in his 1973 paper, “On the detectivity of advanced galactic civilizations.”
As Garretta argued, highly advanced civilizations may undergo rapid technological acceleration to the point that they evolve “beyond recognizable or detectable phases.” Such “post-biological” lifeforms may opt to live in “radio quiet” regions and choose not to communicate, focusing on optimizing their environments instead. Meanwhile, Ray Kurzweil emphasized that the history of technological progress is guided by the “law of accelerating returns,” in which each new technological breakthrough accelerates the pace of development.
This trend, Kurzweil argues, will eventually reach a point of inflection where progress will no longer be measurable using our current metric.
The Trouble with Transcension
A related idea is the Transcenion Hypothesis, which was popularized by futurist John M. Smart, the CEO of Foresight University and founder of the Acceleration Studies Foundation. In his 2002 paper, titled ” Answering the Fermi Paradox: Exploring the Mechanisms of Universal Transcension, ” he argued that technological evolution could be the reason for the “Great Silence.”
Smart extended his arguments in a 2011 essay titled “The transcension hypothesis: Sufficiently advanced civilizations invariably leave our universe, and implications for METI and SETI.” Here, explained how “a universal process of evolutionary development guides all sufficiently advanced civilizations into what may be called “inner space,” a computationally optimal domain of increasingly dense, productive, miniaturized, and efficient scales of space, time, energy, and matter…”
Central to this hypothesis is the idea that Evolutionary Development (aka. evo-devo) is a fundamental dynamic in our Universe where biological and technological development simultaneously contribute to an “autopoietic” (self-reproducing) system. In particular, Smart considered how transcendent ETIs would relocate to the regions surrounding black holes since they are an ideal power source (the Penrose Process) and could enable all kinds of extreme physical science.
Central to the Transcension Hypothesis and other theories that focus on “environmental optimization” over expansion is the Barrow Scale. Proposed in 1998 by cosmologist John D. Barrow, this scale is the inverse of the famous Kardashev Scale, suggesting that advanced species would choose to occupy smaller and smaller scales of space. In his 1998 study, “Impossibility: Limits of Science and the Science of Limits,” Barrow observed that humans have benefited far more from extending their abilities to increasingly small scales than to larger ones, citing concepts like Moore’s Law.
This led Barrow to propose a possible extension to the Kardashev Scale known as “Microdimensional Mastery,” which classifies civilizations in the following way:
– Type I-minus: capable of manipulating objects over the scale of themselves*
– Type II-minus: capable of reading and engineering the genetic code*
– Type III-minus: capable of manipulating matter at the molecular level*
– Type IV-minus: capable of manipulating matter at the atomic level (i.e., nanotechnology)
– Type V-minus: capable of manipulating matter at the subatomic level (nucleus and nucleons)
– Type VI-minus: capable of manipulating the elementary particles of matter (quarks and leptons)
– Type Omega-minus: capable of manipulating the basic structure of space and time*
As you have probably gathered by now, the “Brief Window Hypothesis” and related ideas come down to a simple premise. Essentially, humanity has a limited amount of time to communicate with other intelligent species before they “go quiet.” On the one hand, the window could be the result of distance and the good old longevity factor, where civilizations inevitably die before their “annulus” of transmissions is detected and a reply is received.
On the other hand, the window could be the result of technology and the “Law of accelerating returns.” In this scenario, humanity has a limited amount of time to detect messages sent via traditional broadcasting technologies (such as radio waves). By the time a reply reached the intended recipient, they would have already advanced to a higher stage of technological development and would no longer be listening to that frequency. Similarly, a sufficiently advanced civilization may lose interest in making contact with others, preferring to live out its optimized existence in silence.
In short, civilizations either inevitably die or evolve to the point that we would lack the means to communicate with them (or maybe even recognize them). Both of these possibilities have significant implications for SETI, METI, and the prospect of humanity someday making contact with another intelligence. These theories represent another important milestone in the history of SETI, where scientists truly dug deep to answer the fundamental question, “Where is everybody?”
Tune in next time, where we’ll address one of the most pressing questions facing SETI researchers today: Is it time to update the Fermi Paradox, or let it go? We’ll also look at the new and exciting efforts to renew the search for intelligent life, thus proving finally that humanity is not alone in the Universe!
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