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Extraterrestrial Landscaping

Grass isn’t always greener on distant planets.

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On Earth, green is a symbol of life and growth, but a recent study found that photosynthesizing ­organisms on other planets could have color signatures like red, ­orange, yellow, or black—but probably not blue.

During photosynthesis, plants use the sun’s light energy ­to build ­useful organic molecules. On Earth, the plant ­pigment chlorophyll absorbs the most abundant and highest-energy colors that reach the planet’s surface—red and blue, respectively—while reflecting green, giving vegetation its color. But the distribution of colors reaching planets orbiting other suns could be different.

“Pigments must adapt to the spectrum of available light,” explains biometeorologist Nancy Kiang of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

Kiang and her colleagues surveyed diverse photosynthetic Earth organisms to learn how they take advantage of the sun’s particular blend of light. They then predicted what colors would be most useful for photosynthesis on planets surrounding a variety of star types. Stars hotter ...

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