2025
Ref: SCART-2025-0118

The effect of a biosphere on the habitable timespan of stagnant-lid planets and implications for the atmospheric spectrum

Höning, Dennis ; Carone, Ludmila ; Baumeister, Philipp ; Chubb, Kathy L. ; Grenfell, John Lee ; Hakim, Kaustubh ; Iro, Nicolas ; Taysum, Benjamin ; Tosi, Nicola


published in Astronomy & Astrophysics, 693 issue jan, pp. A205 (2025)

Abstract: Temperature-dependent biological productivity controls silicate weathering and thereby extends the potential habitable timespan of Earth. Models and theoretical considerations indicate that the runaway greenhouse on Earth-like exoplanets is generally accompanied by a dramatic increase in atmospheric H2O and CO2, which might be observed with the upcoming generation of space telescopes. If an active biosphere extends the habitable timespan of exoplanets similarly to Earth, observing the atmospheric spectra of exoplanets near the inner edge of the habitable zone could then give insights into whether the planet is inhabited. Here, we explore this idea for Earth-like stagnant-lid planets. We find that while for a reduced mantle, a surface biosphere extends the habitable timespan of the planet by about 1 Gyr, for more oxidising conditions, the biologically enhanced rate of weathering becomes increasingly compensated for by an increased supply rate of CO2 to the atmosphere. Observationally, the resulting difference in atmospheric CO2 near the inner edge of the habitable zone is clearly distinguishable between biotic planets with active weathering and abiotic planets that have experienced a runaway greenhouse. For an efficient hydrological cycle, the increased bioproductivity also leads to a CH4 biosignature observable with JWST. As the planet becomes uninhabitable, the H2O infrared absorption bands dominate, but the 4.3-µm CO2 band remains a clear window into the CO2 abundances. In summary, while the effect of life on the carbonate-silicate cycle leaves a record in the atmospheric spectrum of Earth-like stagnant-lid planets, future work is needed especially to determine the tectonic state and composition of exoplanets and to push forward the development of the next generation of space telescopes.

Keyword(s): Earth ; planets and satellites: atmospheres ; planets and satellites: interiors ; planets and satellites: physical evolution ; planets and satellites: terrestrial planets
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202451940
Links: link
Funding: FED-tWIN/STELLA/Prf-2021-022


The record appears in these collections:
Royal Observatory of Belgium > Reference Systems & Planetology
Science Articles > Peer Reviewed Articles



 Record created 2025-02-04, last modified 2025-02-04


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