TL;DR
This paper updates the estimates of habitable zone boundaries around main-sequence stars using an improved climate model with new absorption data, providing more accurate criteria for planet habitability assessments.
Contribution
It introduces a new 1-D climate model with updated absorption coefficients to refine habitable zone boundaries across different star types.
Findings
Inner edge near 0.99 AU for the Solar System
Outer edge near 1.70 AU for the Solar System
No clear boundary between runaway greenhouse and water loss for stars with T_{eff} < 5000 K
Abstract
Identifying terrestrial planets in the habitable zones (HZs) of other stars is one of the primary goals of ongoing radial velocity and transit exoplanet surveys and proposed future space missions. Most current estimates of the boundaries of the HZ are based on 1-D, cloud-free, climate model calculations by Kasting et al.(1993). The inner edge of the HZ in Kasting et al.(1993) model was determined by loss of water, and the outer edge was determined by the maximum greenhouse provided by a CO2 atmosphere. A conservative estimate for the width of the HZ from this model in our Solar system is 0.95-1.67 AU. Here, an updated 1-D radiative-convective, cloud-free climate model is used to obtain new estimates for HZ widths around F, G, K and M stars. New H2O and CO2 absorption coefficients, derived from the HITRAN 2008 and HITEMP 2010 line-by-line databases, are important improvements to the…
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