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Study: Many mini‑Neptunes may have solid surfaces — an artist's rendering of a star and a planet

Study: Many mini‑Neptunes may have solid surfacesCEFR B1

2 Dec 2025

Adapted from Louise Lerner-Chicago, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by NASA Hubble Space Telescope, Unsplash

AI-assisted adaptation of the original article, simplified for language learners.

Mini‑Neptunes are common exoplanets a little smaller than Neptune. They combine rock and metal with thick envelopes of hydrogen, helium and possibly water. Because they appear often around other stars but not in our solar system, astronomers want to know what their surfaces are like.

The new study, led by Professor Eliza Kempton at the University of Chicago, used telescope observations and computer models to re‑examine previous ideas. Observations from the James Webb Space Telescope of the planet GJ 1214 b, which orbits a star in the constellation Ophiucus, suggest its atmosphere may contain larger molecules than simple hydrogen and helium. A heavier atmosphere produces much more weight over the surface and so much higher pressure.

The team simulated planets with different atmospheres and temperatures and found that high pressure can turn molten rock back into solid rock, much as carbon condenses into diamond deep beneath Earth. They conclude that a substantial portion of mini‑Neptunes once thought to be lava worlds may instead have solid surfaces held down by thick atmospheres. The work appears in Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Difficult words

  • exoplanetsplanet that orbits a star outside our solar system
  • envelopesthick gas layer around a planet or body
  • atmosphereair and gases around a planet or body
    atmospheres
  • moleculesvery small unit of a chemical substance
  • pressureforce from weight on a surface
  • simulatedto make a model or test of something
  • condensesto change gas or molten material to solid
  • lava worldsplanet with large surface of molten rock

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Discussion questions

  • If a mini-Neptune has a solid surface under a thick atmosphere, how would that change what scientists want to study about the planet?
  • Do you think high pressure environments could allow life forms different from those on Earth? Why or why not?
  • Which part of the study would you like to learn more about: telescope observations or computer models? Explain your choice.

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