The Effect of Orbital Configuration on the Possible Climates and Habitability of Kepler-62f
Aomawa L. Shields, Rory Barnes, Eric Agol, Benjamin Charnay, Cecilia, M. Bitz, Victoria S. Meadows

TL;DR
This study investigates how orbital configurations and atmospheric conditions influence the climate and habitability of Kepler-62f, revealing multiple scenarios where liquid water could exist on its surface.
Contribution
It combines orbital dynamics, tidal evolution, and climate modeling to identify conditions supporting habitability on Kepler-62f, a novel integrated approach for exoplanet climate assessment.
Findings
Stable eccentricity range for Kepler-62f is 0.00 to 0.32.
High atmospheric CO2 levels can sustain Earth-like climates.
Obliquity and eccentricity variations can create habitable regions.
Abstract
As lower-mass stars often host multiple rocky planets, gravitational interactions among planets can have significant effects on climate and habitability over long timescales. Here we explore a specific case, Kepler-62f, a potentially habitable planet in a five-planet system with a K2V host star. N-body integrations reveal the stable range of initial eccentricities for Kepler-62f is , absent the effect of additional, undetected planets. We simulate the tidal evolution of Kepler-62f in this range and find that, for certain assumptions, the planet can be locked in a synchronous rotation state. Simulations using LMD Generic GCM indicate that with 3 bars of CO in its atmosphere, Kepler-62f would only be warm enough for surface liquid water at the upper limit of this eccentricity range, providing it has a high planetary obliquity (between 60 and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Spacecraft Design and Technology
