Habitable Climates: The Influence of Eccentricity
Courtney D. Dressing (1), David S. Spiegel (1,2), Caleb A. Scharf, (3,4), Kristen Menou (2,4), Sean N. Raymond (5,6) ((1) Princeton University, (2) Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, UCSB, (3) Columbia Astrobiology, Center, Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory

TL;DR
This study uses a climate model to explore how orbital eccentricity, obliquity, and ocean coverage affect the habitability of exoplanets, especially their risk of entering a snowball state, with implications for observational targets.
Contribution
It demonstrates how eccentricity and obliquity influence habitable zone boundaries and planetary stability, highlighting factors that can extend or reduce habitability.
Findings
Obliquity can significantly expand the habitable zone for eccentric planets.
Oceans covering at least 10% of the surface buffer against global freezing.
Eccentric planets may be promising targets for direct observation missions.
Abstract
In the outer regions of the habitable zone, the risk of transitioning into a globally frozen "snowball" state poses a threat to the habitability of planets with the capacity to host water-based life. We use a one-dimensional energy balance climate model (EBM) to examine how obliquity, spin rate, orbital eccentricity, and ocean coverage might influence the onset of such a snowball state. For an exoplanet, these parameters may be strikingly different from the values observed for Earth. Since, for constant semimajor axis, the annual mean stellar irradiation scales with (1-e^2)^(-1/2), one might expect the greatest habitable semimajor axis (for fixed atmospheric composition) to scale as (1-e^2)^(-1/4). We find that this standard ansatz provides a reasonable lower bound on the outer boundary of the habitable zone, but the influence of obliquity and ocean fraction can be profound in the…
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