The Goldilocks problem for detecting water in terrestrial planets: Constraining water abundances in the mid-IR with LIFE
Sarah Rugheimer, Eleonora Alei, Björn S. Konrad, Benjamin Taysum, John Lee Grenfell + 5 more
TLDR
The LIFE mission can constrain exoplanet water vapor, a key habitability indicator, across a wide range of concentrations, but detection depends on atmospheric profiles.
Key contributions
- LIFE mission can detect atmospheric water vapor on exoplanets, a proxy for surface oceans.
- Detection capability varies significantly based on the assumed vertical water distribution.
- LIFE can constrain H2O from ~10^-3 to 1 bar for Earth-like profiles, covering habitable ranges.
- Very low water levels (Mars-like) are undetectable, and high concentrations saturate signals.
Why it matters
This study defines technical requirements for the LIFE mission to identify habitable exoplanets by detecting atmospheric water vapor. It highlights the importance of atmospheric modeling assumptions for accurate water abundance characterization. These findings are crucial for future exoplanet habitability surveys.
Original Abstract
We investigate how well the Large Interferometer for Exoplanets (LIFE) mission concept can detect habitable conditions on exoplanets through the presence of atmospheric water vapor as a proxy for surface oceans. We model the atmosphere of a pre-biotic Earth-like planet across a range of water concentrations, from water-poor to water-rich, with surface partial pressures from 10$^{-7}$ to 1 bar of H$_2$O. We simulate LIFE-like noise at spectral resolutions R = 50 and 100 using LIFEsim and perform Bayesian atmospheric retrievals to determine the technical requirements for LIFE to confirm habitability. We model three vertical water distributions: a vertically constant profile, a Manabe-Wetherald based Earth-like profile, and a diffusion and photochemistry profile to test how the assumed vertical structure influences the retrieved abundances. Clouds are not modeled. We find the ability for LIFE to detect water strongly depends on the vertical profile assumed. LIFE is unable to constrain the highest water cases and provides upper limits on low water planets. For the highest water abundances, absorption features saturate and reduce sensitivity to characterize precise H$_2$O levels. Water vapor is not detectable in any profile modeled for $\leq10^{-6}$ bar in surface water, comparable to Mars. For an Earth-like profile, LIFE could constrain H$_2$O concentrations from $\sim10^{-3}$ to 1 bar, spanning below and above present-day Earth concentrations of 10$^{-2}$ bar. Detectable atmospheric water may imply surface oceans, as water is highly reactive and rapidly removed by surface mineral reactions. Thus, LIFE can characterize water abundances indicative of habitable surface conditions.
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