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Carbonate-silicate cycle predictions of Earth-like planetary climates and testing the habitable zone concept

Space Sciences

Carbonate-silicate cycle predictions of Earth-like planetary climates and testing the habitable zone concept

O. R. Lehmer, D. C. Catling, et al.

This research by Owen R. Lehmer, David C. Catling, and Joshua Krissansen-Totton delves into the conventional habitable zone concept, unveiling a fascinating log-linear relationship between atmospheric CO2 and stellar flux on Earth-like exoplanets. They predict significant observational requirements to validate these findings and enhance our understanding of planetary habitability.... show more
Abstract
In the conventional habitable zone (HZ) concept, a CO2-H2O greenhouse maintains surface liquid water. Through the water-mediated carbonate-silicate weathering cycle, atmospheric CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) responds to changes in surface temperature, stabilizing the climate over geologic timescales. We show that this weathering feedback ought to produce a log-linear relationship between pCO2 and incident flux on Earth-like planets in the HZ. However, this trend has scatter because geophysical and physicochemical parameters can vary, such as land area for weathering and CO2 outgassing fluxes. Using a coupled climate and carbonate-silicate weathering model, we quantify the likely scatter in pCO2 with orbital distance throughout the HZ. From this dispersion, we predict a two-dimensional relationship between incident flux and pCO2 in the HZ and show that it could be detected from at least 83 (2σ) Earth-like exoplanet observations. If fewer Earth-like exoplanets are observed, testing the HZ hypothesis from this relationship could be difficult.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Dec 01, 2020
Authors
Owen R. Lehmer, David C. Catling, Joshua Krissansen-Totton
Tags
habitable zone
CO2
greenhouse effect
Earth-like planets
carbonate-silicate weathering
stellar flux
exoplanets
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