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Constraints on Climate and Habitability for Earth-like Exoplanets Determined from a General Circulation Model

Conventional definitions of habitability require abundant liquid surface water to exist continuously over geologic timescales. Water in each of its thermodynamic phases interacts with solar and thermal radiation and is the cause for strong climatic feedbacks. Thus, assessments of the habitable zone require models to include a complete treatment of the hydrological cycle over geologic time. Here, we use the Community Atmosphere Model from the National Center for Atmospheric Research to study the evolution of climate for an Earth-like planet at constant CO2, under a wide range of stellar fluxes from F-, G-, and K-dwarf main sequence stars. Around each star we find four stable climate states defined by mutually exclusive global mean surface temperatures (Ts); snowball (Ts ≤ 235 K), waterbelt (235 K ≤ Ts ≤ 250 K), temperate (275 K ≤ Ts ≤ 315 K), and moist greenhouse (Ts ≥ 330 K). Each is separated by abrupt climatic transitions. Waterbelt, temperate, and cooler moist greenhouse climates can maintain open-ocean against both sea ice albedo and hydrogen escape processes respectively, and thus constitute habitable worlds. We consider the warmest possible habitable planet as having Ts ∼ 355 K, at which point diffusion limited water-loss could remove an Earth ocean in ∼1 Gyr. Without long timescale regulation of non-condensable greenhouse species at Earth-like temperatures and pressures, such as CO2, habitability can be maintained for an upper limit of ∼2.2, ∼2.4, and ∼4.7 Gyr around F-, G-, and K-dwarf stars respectively, due to main sequence brightening.
Document ID
20220004468
Acquisition Source
2230 Support
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
Authors
Eric T Wolf ORCID
(University of Colorado Boulder Boulder, Colorado, United States)
Aomawa L Shields
(University of California, Irvine Irvine, California, United States)
Ravi K Kopparapu
(University of Maryland, College Park College Park, Maryland, United States)
Jacob Haqq-Misra ORCID
(Blue Marble Space Institute of Science Seattle, Washington, United States)
Owen B Toon ORCID
(University of Colorado Boulder Boulder, Colorado, United States)
Date Acquired
March 17, 2022
Publication Date
March 8, 2017
Publication Information
Publication: Astrophysical Journal
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Volume: 837
Issue: 2
Issue Publication Date: March 10, 2017
ISSN: 0004-637X
e-ISSN: 1538-4357
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX14AH17G
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX16AB61G
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH05ZDA001C
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH12ZDA002C
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNA13AA93A
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
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