About 2.5 billion years ago, microbes learned to harness plentiful solar energy to reduce CO2 with H2O, extracting energy and producing O2 as waste. O2 production from this metabolic process was so vigorous that it saturated its photochemical sinks, permitting it to reach "runaway" conditions and rapidly accumulate in the atmosphere despite its reactivity. Here we argue that O2 may not be unique: diverse gases produced by life may experience a "runaway" effect similar to O2. This runaway occurs because the ability of an atmosphere to photochemically cleanse itself of trace gases is generally finite. If produced at rates exceeding this finite limit, even reactive gases can rapidly accumulate to high concentrations and become potentially dete...
Here we review how environmental context can be used to interpret whether O2 is a biosignature in ex...
Ocean-atmosphere chemistry on Earth has undergone dramatic evolutionary changes throughout its long ...
We present a study of the photochemistry of abiotic habitable planets with anoxic CO₂–N₂ atmospheres...
About 2.5 billion years ago, microbes learned to harness plentiful solar energy to reduce CO$_2$ wit...
Detection of life on other planets requires identification of biosignatures, i.e., observable planet...
Atmospheric chemistry models have shown that molecular oxygen can build up in CO_2-dominated atmosph...
Oxygen and methane are considered to be the canonical biosignatures of modern Earth, and the simulta...
International audienceWe revisit the validity of the presence of O-2 or O-3 in the atmosphere of a r...
Some atmospheric gases have been proposed as counter indicators to the presence of life on an exopla...
We investigate the chemical stability of CO_2-dominated atmospheres of desiccated M dwarf terrestria...
We describe how environmental context can help determine whether oxygen (O2) detected in extrasolar ...
The strongest remotely detectable signature of life on our planet today is the photosynthetically pr...
The search for life on planets outside our solar system will use spectroscopic identification of atm...
The search for life on planets outside our solar system will use spectroscopic identification of atm...
Here we review how environmental context can be used to interpret whether O2 is a biosignature in ex...
Ocean-atmosphere chemistry on Earth has undergone dramatic evolutionary changes throughout its long ...
We present a study of the photochemistry of abiotic habitable planets with anoxic CO₂–N₂ atmospheres...
About 2.5 billion years ago, microbes learned to harness plentiful solar energy to reduce CO$_2$ wit...
Detection of life on other planets requires identification of biosignatures, i.e., observable planet...
Atmospheric chemistry models have shown that molecular oxygen can build up in CO_2-dominated atmosph...
Oxygen and methane are considered to be the canonical biosignatures of modern Earth, and the simulta...
International audienceWe revisit the validity of the presence of O-2 or O-3 in the atmosphere of a r...
Some atmospheric gases have been proposed as counter indicators to the presence of life on an exopla...
We investigate the chemical stability of CO_2-dominated atmospheres of desiccated M dwarf terrestria...
We describe how environmental context can help determine whether oxygen (O2) detected in extrasolar ...
The strongest remotely detectable signature of life on our planet today is the photosynthetically pr...
The search for life on planets outside our solar system will use spectroscopic identification of atm...
The search for life on planets outside our solar system will use spectroscopic identification of atm...
Here we review how environmental context can be used to interpret whether O2 is a biosignature in ex...
Ocean-atmosphere chemistry on Earth has undergone dramatic evolutionary changes throughout its long ...
We present a study of the photochemistry of abiotic habitable planets with anoxic CO₂–N₂ atmospheres...