Organic Carbonyls Are Poor Biosignature Gases in Exoplanet Atmospheres but May Generate Significant CO

Author:

Zhan ZhuchangORCID,Huang JingchengORCID,Seager SaraORCID,Petkowski Janusz J.ORCID,Ranjan SukritORCID

Abstract

Abstract The search for signs of life beyond Earth is a crucial driving motivation of exoplanet science, fueling new work on biosignature gases in habitable exoplanet atmospheres. We study carbonyls, a category of molecules containing the C=O double bond, following our proposal to systematically identify plausible biosignature gas candidates from a list of all small volatile molecules. We rule out carbonyls as biosignature gases due to both their high water solubility and their high photolysis rate, despite their ubiquitous production by life on Earth, their critical importance in Earth’s life biochemistry, and their uniquely identifiable molecular spectral features in mid- to low-resolution spectroscopy. Even in scenarios where life is a large net source of carbonyls, we demonstrate that detection of carbonyls is not possible on even the most ideal habitable exoplanet, because only 10 ppb of carbonyls can accumulate under our most optimistic assumptions. Moreover, high biological fluxes of organic carbon gases, while mathematically possible, are likely biologically unattainable due to the resulting huge waste of carbon—a main building block for life. Our simulations show that photochemical processing of carbonyls leads to generation of CO in quantities that can reengineer the atmosphere, affirming the ambiguity of CO as an antibiosignature. Overall, we find that the expression of a carbonyl-producing biosphere by CO, though potentially detectable by the James Webb Space Telescope, is unable to be uniquely traced back to carbonyls. While carbonyls fail as a bioindicator, by investigating them we have made a significant step toward systematically assessing the biosignature gas potential of all small volatile molecules.

Funder

Heising-Simons Foundation

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

Cited by 6 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Volatile Organic Compound Metabolism on Early Earth;Journal of Molecular Evolution;2024-07-17

2. An Overview of Exoplanet Biosignatures;Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry;2024-07-01

3. Is There Such a Thing as a Biosignature?;Astrobiology;2023-11-01

4. The Feasibility of Detecting Biosignatures in the TRAPPIST-1 Planetary System with JWST;The Planetary Science Journal;2023-10-01

5. Prebiosignature Molecules Can Be Detected in Temperate Exoplanet Atmospheres with JWST;The Astronomical Journal;2023-07-03

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