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HERO ID
4251150
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
ABIOTIC OZONE AND OXYGEN IN ATMOSPHERES SIMILAR TO PREBIOTIC EARTH
Author(s)
Domagal-Goldman, SD; Segura, A; Claire, MW; Robinson, TD; Meadows, VS
Year
2014
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
The Astrophysical Journal
ISSN:
0004-637X
EISSN:
1538-4357
Volume
792
Issue
2
DOI
10.1088/0004-637X/792/2/90
Web of Science Id
WOS:000341172200008
Abstract
The search for life on planets outside our solar system will use spectroscopic identification of atmospheric biosignatures. The most robust remotely detectable potential biosignature is considered to be the detection of oxygen (O-2) or ozone (O-3) simultaneous to methane (CH4) at levels indicating fluxes from the planetary surface in excess of those that could be produced abiotically. Here we use an altitude-dependent photochemical model with the enhanced lower boundary conditions necessary to carefully explore abiotic O-2 and O-3 production on lifeless planets with a wide variety of volcanic gas fluxes and stellar energy distributions. On some of these worlds, we predict limited O-2 and O-3 buildup, caused by fast chemical production of these gases. This results in detectable abiotic O-3 and CH4 features in the UV-visible, but no detectable abiotic O-2 features. Thus, simultaneous detection of O-3 and CH4 by a UV-visible mission is not a strong biosignature without proper contextual information. Discrimination between biological and abiotic sources of O-2 and O-3 is possible through analysis of the stellar and atmospheric context-particularly redox state and O atom inventory-of the planet in question. Specifically, understanding the spectral characteristics of the star and obtaining a broad wavelength range for planetary spectra should allow more robust identification of false positives for life. This highlights the importance of wide spectral coverage for future exoplanet characterization missions. Specifically, discrimination between true and false positives may require spectral observations that extend into infrared wavelengths and provide contextual information on the planet's atmospheric chemistry.
Keywords
Earth; infrared: planetary systems; planets and satellites: atmospheres; planets and satellites: terrestrial planets; planet-star interactions; ultraviolet: planetary systems
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NAAQS
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ISA-Ozone (2020 Final Project Page)
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