
TL;DR
The faint young Sun problem questions how early Earth remained warm despite a weaker Sun, with research exploring atmospheric and geochemical solutions, but a definitive answer remains elusive.
Contribution
This paper reviews recent research and geochemical constraints, proposing future directions including climate modeling to resolve the faint young Sun problem.
Findings
Atmospheric greenhouse gases likely contributed to warming.
Geochemical evidence constrains early Earth's atmosphere composition.
Climate models are essential for understanding Archean climate conditions.
Abstract
For more than four decades, scientists have been trying to find an answer to one of the most fundamental questions in paleoclimatology, the `faint young Sun problem'. For the early Earth, models of stellar evolution predict a solar energy input to the climate system which is about 25% lower than today. This would result in a completely frozen world over the first two billion years in the history of our planet, if all other parameters controlling Earth's climate had been the same. Yet there is ample evidence for the presence of liquid surface water and even life in the Archean (3.8 to 2.5 billion years before present), so some effect (or effects) must have been compensating for the faint young Sun. A wide range of possible solutions have been suggested and explored during the last four decades, with most studies focusing on higher concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases like…
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