What’s in a world? Astronomer Laura Kreidberg doesn’t know, but she’s dying to find out.
Kreidberg, 33, focuses on exploring the clouds of alien worlds to help astronomers analyze and catalog their astounding diversity, history, and, just maybe, inhabitants. She serves as founding director of the Atmospheric Physics of Exoplanets (APEx) Department, established in 2020 at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany.
Over the years, Kreidberg has observed and characterized numerous unique exoplanetary atmospheres. Highlights include TRAPPIST-1 c, a Venus-like world that orbits its red dwarf star every 2.4 days; WASP-12 b, a hot Jupiter with a temperature of 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit (2,200 degrees Celsius) that’s being torn apart by tidal forces; and GJ 1214 b, the first super-Earth around which an atmosphere has been detected. The list goes on.
“Similar to children,” Kreidberg jokes, “you cannot pick a favorite exoplanet. That’s kind of bad form. But at the moment, my favorite planet is LHS 3844 b. This is a hot rocky planet that I studied with the Spitzer Space Telescope, and we inferred that the planet actually has no atmosphere at all,” a first-of-its-kind find.
For now, though, Kreidberg, along with the broader astronomical community, is eagerly awaiting future data releases from the gold-plated mirrors of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).