Stability of CO2 Atmospheres on Terrestrial Exoplanets in the Proximity of M Dwarfs
Abstract
M dwarfs are promising targets for the search and characterization of terrestrial exoplanets that might be habitable, as the habitable planets around M dwarfs are in much more close-in orbits compared to their counterparts around Sun-like stars. CO2, one of the most important greenhouse gases on our planet, is conventionally adopted as a major greenhouse gas in studying the habitability of terrestrial exoplanets around M dwarfs. However, the stability of CO2 in terrestrial atmospheres has been called into question due to the high FUV/NUV flux ratio of some M dwarfs in comparison to that of Sun-like stars. While CO2 is photolyzed into CO and O by photons in the FUV, with O2 forming from the O atoms through third body catalytic reactions, NUV photons are able to photolyze water, producing HOx radicals which go on to catalytically recombine the relatively stable CO and O2 molecules back into CO2. The comparatively low NUV flux of some M dwarfs leads to a significantly reduced efficiency of catalytic recombination of CO and O2 and the possible net destruction of CO2 and the build up of CO and O2. In this work we test the above hypothesis using a 1D photochemical kinetics model for a Mars-sized planet with an initial atmospheric composition similar to that of Mars and the incoming stellar flux of a weakly active M dwarf, assuming the exoplanet is 0.1 AU away from its parent star, in proximity of its habitable zone. We show that a CO2-dominated atmosphere can be converted into a CO2/CO/O2-dominated atmosphere in 10^3-10^4 years by CO2 photolysis. This process is kept from running away by a combination of O2 photolysis, three body reactions of O, O2, and another species to form O3, and reactions of CO with OH to form CO2 and H. However, such a large amount of O2 and CO, combined with some amount of H and H2, may be susceptible to spontaneous combustion or detonation, and thus could prove to be an especially unstable state in itself. Thus there could arise a situation whereby a CO2 atmosphere dissociating into CO and O2 would be periodically and violently converted back into mostly CO2 due to some "spark". Our simulation results suggest that it is unlikely that CO2 atmospheres can remain stable on terrestrial planets around M dwarfs with high FUV/NUV flux ratios unless it is extremely quiescent. Furthermore, any detection of O2 and O3 in such atmospheres is far more likely to be due to photochemical processes rather than as a result of biology.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUFM.P21B1728G
- Keywords:
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- 5210 PLANETARY SCIENCES: ASTROBIOLOGY Planetary atmospheres;
- clouds;
- and hazes;
- 5405 PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLID SURFACE PLANETS Atmospheres;
- 6296 PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS Extra-solar planets;
- 0317 ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE Chemical kinetic and photochemical properties