Radiative forcings for 28 potential Archean greenhouse gases
Brendan Byrne, Colin Goldblatt

TL;DR
This study provides high-accuracy radiative forcing calculations for 28 potential Archean greenhouse gases, highlighting the roles of CO2 and CH4 in resolving the Faint Young Sun Problem and assessing the impact of other gases.
Contribution
It offers detailed line-by-line radiative forcing data for multiple gases using HITRAN 2012, including new insights into methane's near-infrared absorption and gas overlap effects.
Findings
CO2 at 0.11-0.32 bar can resolve the FYSP at 2.8 Gyr BP
Methane's near-infrared absorption is stronger than previously thought
Several other gases can contribute up to 10 W/m² radiative forcing
Abstract
Despite reduced insolation in the late Archean, evidence suggests a warm climate which was likely sustained by a stronger greenhouse effect, the so-called Faint Young Sun Problem (FYSP). CO2 and CH4 are generally thought to be the mainstays of this enhanced greenhouse, though many other gases have been proposed. We present high accuracy radiative forcings for CO2, CH4 and 26 other gases, performing the radiative transfer calculations at line-by-line resolution and using HITRAN 2012 line data for background pressures of 0.5, 1, and 2 bar of atmospheric N2. For CO2 to resolve the FYSP alone at 2.8 Gyr BP (80% of present solar luminosity), 0.32 bar is needed with 0.5 bar of atmospheric N2, 0.20 bar with 1 bar of atmospheric N2, or 0.11 bar with 2 bar of atmospheric N2. For CH4, we find that near-infrared absorption is much stronger than previously thought, arising from updates to the…
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