From climate models to planetary habitability: temperature constraints for complex life
Laura Silva (1), Giovanni Vladilo (1), Patricia M. Schulte (2),, Giuseppe Murante (1), Antonello Provenzale (3) (1 National Institute for, Astrophysics INAF-OATs, Trieste, Italy; 2 Department of Zoology, Univ. of, British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; 3 Institute of Geosciences

TL;DR
This study establishes temperature-based criteria for planetary habitability for complex life, focusing on terrestrial poikilotherms, and introduces an atmospheric mass habitable zone (AMHZ) based on climate modeling.
Contribution
It proposes a new habitability index h050 for complex life and defines an atmospheric mass habitable zone, expanding the traditional habitable zone concept.
Findings
The thermal limits for complex life are 0°C to 50°C.
The atmospheric mass habitable zone (AMHZ) is narrower than the classic habitable zone.
Temperature and atmospheric conditions influence potential biosignatures and cosmic ray exposure.
Abstract
In an effort to derive temperature based criteria of habitability for multicellular life, we investigated the thermal limits of terrestrial poikilotherms, i.e. organisms whose body temperature and the functioning of all vital processes is directly affected by the ambient temperature. Multicellular poikilotherms are the most common and evolutionarily ancient form of complex life on earth. The thermal limits for their active metabolism and reproduction are bracketed by the temperature interval 0C<T<50C. The same interval applies to the photosynthetic production of oxygen, an essential ingredient of complex life, and for the generation of atmospheric biosignatures. Analysis of the main mechanisms responsible for the thermal thresholds of terrestrial life suggests that the same mechanisms would apply to other forms of chemical life. We propose a habitability index for complex life, h050,…
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