Co-evolution of atmospheres, life, and climate
John Lee Grenfell, Heike Rauer, Franck Selsis, Lisa Kaltenegger,, Charles Beichman, William Danchi, Carlos Eiroa, Malcolm Fridlund, Thomas, Henning, Tom Herbst, Helmut Lammer, Alain L\'eger, Ren\'e Liseau, Jonathan, Lunine, Francesco Paresce, Alan Penny, Andreas Quirrenbach

TL;DR
This paper discusses the co-evolution of Earth's atmosphere, life, and climate, emphasizing how biological processes have historically modified atmospheric composition and climate, informing the study of Earth-like exoplanets.
Contribution
It highlights the importance of considering biological influences on atmospheric evolution when characterizing atmospheres of Earth-like exoplanets.
Findings
Early Earth's atmosphere was rich in CO2 and possibly CH4.
Oxygen accumulation led to ozone formation, enabling surface life.
Life significantly influenced atmospheric composition and climate over Earth's history.
Abstract
After Earth's origin, our host star, the Sun, was shining 20 to 25 percent less brightly than today. Without greenhouse-like conditions to warm the atmosphere, our early planet would have been an ice ball and life may never have evolved. But life did evolve, which indicates that greenhouse gases must have been present on early Earth to warm the planet. Evidence from the geologic record indicates an abundance of the greenhouse gas CO2. CH4 was probably present as well, and in this regard methanogenic bacteria, which belong to a diverse group of anaerobic procaryotes that ferment CO 2 plus H2 to CH4, may have contributed to modification of the early atmosphere. Molecular oxygen was not present, as is indicated by the study of rocks from that era, which contain iron carbonate rather than iron oxide. Multicellular organisms originated as cells within colonies that became increasingly…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
