Inferring Chemical Disequilibrium Biosignatures for Proterozoic Earth-Like Exoplanets

Chemical disequilibrium quantified via available free energy has previously been proposed as a potential biosignature. However, exoplanet biosignature remote sensing work has not yet investigated how observational uncertainties impact the ability to infer a life-generated available free energy. We p...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2023-11
Hauptverfasser: Young, Amber V, Robinson, Tyler D, Krissansen-Totton, Joshua, Schwieterman, Edward W, Wogan, Nicholas F, Way, Michael J, Sohl, Linda E, Arney, Giada N, Reinhard, Christopher T, Line, Michael R, Catling, David C, Windsor, James D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chemical disequilibrium quantified via available free energy has previously been proposed as a potential biosignature. However, exoplanet biosignature remote sensing work has not yet investigated how observational uncertainties impact the ability to infer a life-generated available free energy. We pair an atmospheric retrieval tool to a thermodynamics model to assess the detectability of chemical disequilibrium signatures of Earth-like exoplanets, emphasizing the Proterozoic Eon where atmospheric abundances of oxygen-methane disequilibrium pairs may have been relatively high. Retrieval model studies applied across a range of gas abundances revealed that order-of-magnitude constraints on disequilibrium energy are achieved with simulated reflected-light observations at the high abundance scenario and signal-to-noise ratios (50) while weak constraints are found at moderate SNRs (20\,--\,30) for med\,--\,low abundance cases. Furthermore, the disequilibrium energy constraints are improved by modest thermal information encoded in water vapor opacities at optical and near-infrared wavelengths. These results highlight how remotely detecting chemical disequilibrium biosignatures can be a useful and metabolism-agnostic approach to biosignature detection.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2311.06083