I don’t write science fiction, but I have several friends who think I do simply because I write about distant planets and futuristic ways to reach them. The boundary between SF and science has always fascinated me. I like to poke around in old magazines, most of them from the science fiction field, but a particular interest is magazines like Hugo Gernsback’s Science and Invention and Radio News, early 20th Century venues for fiction that dealt with science and preceded 1926’s Amazing Stories.

Astronomy and fiction have been mingling for a long time, but as we uncover startling exoplanets and posit theories that explain them, I’m usually wondering how quickly an SF writer will pick up on the latest work with a stunning new setting. Today’s paper offers another opportunity, as it presents the possibility that ‘rogue’ planets, wandering in the interstellar dark without a warming Sun, may support biology not on their surfaces but on any potential moons.

Image: Artist’s rendition of a Jupiter-sized rogue planet moving through interstellar space without any star. Scientists have been exploring the possibility of life on worlds warmed by internal heating alone. A new paper now looks at moons around such worlds and the processes that could keep them warm. Credit: JPL/Caltech.

Scientists involved with the German research network ORIGINS, working with researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (near Munich) believe that large moons of free-floating planets can retain liquid water oceans for over 4 billion years because of the twin effects of dense hydrogen atmospheres and tidal heating. That closes in on the amount of time Earth has existed, with the obvious implication that complex life could develop.

Lead author David Dahlbüdding (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen) is lead author of the study:

“Our collaboration with the team of Professor Dieter Braun helped us recognize that the cradle of life does not necessarily require a sun. We discovered a clear connection between these distant moons and the early Earth, where high concentrations of hydrogen through asteroid impacts could have created the conditions for life.”

Recent work has shown that a gas giant ejected from its birth system could retain moons despite the gravitational encounter that would have forced it into interstellar space. Orbiting moons would be nudged into elliptical orbits by the event, but the resulting tidal forces between moon and planet are a blessing in disguise, in that they could generate enough frictional heat to maintain surface oceans. An atmosphere rich in hydrogen can also undergo ‘collision-induced absorption.’ in which thermal radiation is then retained by the atmosphere.

Earlier papers have examined rogue planet atmospheres heavy in CO2, where atmospheric collapse is a probability. But the researchers think hydrogen is far more interesting. From the paper:

The present-day Earth looks much different from the worlds presented here, which, with their thick hydrogen envelopes and possibly deep oceans, resemble a Hycean planet. Although usually in the sub-Neptune range, these worlds are prime candidates for the detection of life (Madhusudhan et al. 2021, 2023a,b). In their case, any tidal heating could conversely narrow the habitable zone (Livesey et al. 2025). Our small-scale Hycean worlds could provide relatively better conditions for life. Due to their (∼ 25%) lower gravity, high-pressure ices between a potential liquid water ocean and the rocky core would be less likely, allowing the ocean to receive essential nutrients (Cockell et al. 2024). Although, as Madhusudhan et al. (2023a) note, this represents only one possible source of these essential biological elements.

What to make of this? Extending the range of possible biology is always interesting, but the natural question is how we might actually observe such a system. Free-floating planets are a difficult enough catch without bringing potential moons into the mix. Gravitational microlensing offers a faint possibility, but here we’re dealing with chance encounters with background stars that are beyond our conceivable likelihood to predict. Although the authors mention transits of the host free-floating planet, this seems quite a reach. How do we know where to look, when their presence is unpredictable? The Roman Space Telescope should detect plenty of rogue planets, but the issue remains – a gravitationally microlensed event is by its nature unrepeatable.

I don’t want to downplay targeted searches for young rogue planets still throwing a good infrared signature in their adolescence. These we might actually detect through direct imaging if we scan nearby star clusters, so it’s not outside the realm of possibility to think we might get a rare transit of a moon. But the unlikeliness of such a detection means we may have to chalk this up as a fascinating theoretical result without observational consequences, at least at the present state of our technology.

Still, what an interesting landscape for a science fiction tale…

The paper is Dahlbüdding et al., “Habitability of Tidally Heated H2-Dominated Exomoons around Free-Floating Planets,” in process at Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 24 February 2026 (full text).