Evaluating the Plausible Range of N2O Biosignatures on Exo-Earths: An Integrated Biogeochemical, Photochemical, and Spectral Modeling Approach

Author:

Schwieterman Edward W.ORCID,Olson Stephanie L.ORCID,Pidhorodetska DariaORCID,Reinhard Christopher T.,Ganti Ainsley,Fauchez Thomas J.ORCID,Bastelberger Sandra T.ORCID,Crouse Jaime S.ORCID,Ridgwell AndyORCID,Lyons Timothy W.

Abstract

Abstract Nitrous oxide (N2O)—a product of microbial nitrogen metabolism—is a compelling exoplanet biosignature gas with distinctive spectral features in the near- and mid-infrared, and only minor abiotic sources on Earth. Previous investigations of N2O as a biosignature have examined scenarios using Earthlike N2O mixing ratios or surface fluxes, or those inferred from Earth’s geologic record. However, biological fluxes of N2O could be substantially higher, due to a lack of metal catalysts or if the last step of the denitrification metabolism that yields N2 from N2O had never evolved. Here, we use a global biogeochemical model coupled with photochemical and spectral models to systematically quantify the limits of plausible N2O abundances and spectral detectability for Earth analogs orbiting main-sequence (FGKM) stars. We examine N2O buildup over a range of oxygen conditions (1%–100% present atmospheric level) and N2O fluxes (0.01–100 teramole per year; Tmol = 1012 mole) that are compatible with Earth’s history. We find that N2O fluxes of 10 [100] Tmol yr−1 would lead to maximum N2O abundances of ∼5 [50] ppm for Earth–Sun analogs, 90 [1600] ppm for Earths around late K dwarfs, and 30 [300] ppm for an Earthlike TRAPPIST-1e. We simulate emission and transmission spectra for intermediate and maximum N2O concentrations that are relevant to current and future space-based telescopes. We calculate the detectability of N2O spectral features for high-flux scenarios for TRAPPIST-1e with JWST. We review potential false positives, including chemodenitrification and abiotic production via stellar activity, and identify key spectral and contextual discriminants to confirm or refute the biogenicity of the observed N2O.

Funder

NASA Exobiology Program

NASA ICAR

NASA Astrobiology Program

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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