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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Reflections on O2 as a Biosignature in Exoplanetary Atmospheres.

Victoria S. Meadows
- 01 Oct 2017 - 
- Vol. 17, Iss: 10, pp 1022-1052
TLDR
Environmental factors for abiotic O2 have been identified and will improve the ability to choose optimal targets and measurements to guard against false positives, and thorough evaluation of potential biosignatures works to increase confidence in life detection.
Abstract
Oxygenic photosynthesis is Earth's dominant metabolism, having evolved to harvest the largest expected energy source at the surface of most terrestrial habitable zone planets. Using CO2 and H2O—molecules that are expected to be abundant and widespread on habitable terrestrial planets—oxygenic photosynthesis is plausible as a significant planetary process with a global impact. Photosynthetic O2 has long been considered particularly robust as a sign of life on a habitable exoplanet, due to the lack of known “false positives”—geological or photochemical processes that could also produce large quantities of stable O2. O2 has other advantages as a biosignature, including its high abundance and uniform distribution throughout the atmospheric column and its distinct, strong absorption in the visible and near-infrared. However, recent modeling work has shown that false positives for abundant oxygen or ozone could be produced by abiotic mechanisms, including photochemistry and atmospheric escape. Environm...

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Modeling Repeated M Dwarf Flaring at an Earth-like Planet in the Habitable Zone: Atmospheric Effects for an Unmagnetized Planet.

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of active M dwarf stars on the atmospheric equilibrium and surface conditions of a habitable zone Earth-like planet is investigated, which is key to assessing M dwarf planet habitability.
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Evolved Climates and Observational Discriminants for the TRAPPIST-1 Planetary System

TL;DR: In this paper, a 1D terrestrial-planet climate model with line-by-line radiative transfer and mixing length convection (VPL Climate) coupled with a terrestrial photochemistry model was used to simulate environmental states for the TRAPPIST-1 planets.

Evidence for free oxygen in the Neoarchean ocean based on coupled iron-molybdenum isotope fractionation

TL;DR: In this article, a combination of Fe and Mo isotope systematics of Ca-Mg carbonates and shales from the 2.68 to 2.50 Ga Campbellrand-Malmani carbonate platform of the Kaapvaal Craton in South Africa was used to constrain free O2 levels in the photic zone of a Late Archean marine basin by the combined use of Fe-Mo isotope systems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Detecting and Constraining N$_2$ Abundances in Planetary Atmospheres Using Collisional Pairs

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used radiative transfer models to generate synthetic emission and transit transmission spectra of self-consistent N$2$-CO$_2$)-H$_ 2$O atmospheres.

Pale Orange Dots: The Impact of Organic Haze on the Habitability and Detectability of Earthlike Exoplanets

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Photosynthesis 3.5 thousand million years ago

TL;DR: Values of δ13C for sedimentary organic carbon strongly suggest autotrophic CO2 fixation, and the existence of large deposits of sedimentary sulfate is consistent with a photosynthesis dependent on reduced sulfur compounds for reducing power.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response of Atmospheric Biomarkers to NOx-induced Photochemistry Generated by Stellar Cosmic Rays for Earth-like Planets in the Habitable Zone of M-Dwarf Stars

TL;DR: The biomarker O(3) survived all the stellar-activity scenarios considered except for the strong case, whereas the biomarker nitrous oxide (N(2)O) could survive in the planetary atmosphere under all conditions of stellar activity considered here, which clearly has important implications for missions that aim to detect spectroscopic biomarkers.
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