The Habitability of Proxima Centauri b: II: Environmental States and Observational Discriminants
Victoria S. Meadows, Giada N. Arney, Edward W. Schwieterman, Jacob, Lustig-Yaeger, Andrew P. Lincowski, Tyler Robinson, Shawn D. Domagal-Goldman,, Rory K. Barnes, David P. Fleming, Russell Deitrick, Rodrigo Luger, Peter E., Driscoll, Thomas R. Quinn, David Crisp

TL;DR
This study models various atmospheric states of Proxima Centauri b to assess habitability and explores observational methods, like spectra and phase curves, to distinguish these environments, informing future exoplanet characterization efforts.
Contribution
The paper introduces self-consistent climate-photochemical models for different atmospheric scenarios of Proxima Centauri b and evaluates observational discriminants using synthetic spectra and thermal phase curves.
Findings
Thermal phase curves can indicate atmospheric presence.
JWST can characterize heat transport and composition.
Detection of ocean glint is unlikely with JWST.
Abstract
Proxima Centauri b provides an unprecedented opportunity to understand the evolution and nature of terrestrial planets orbiting M dwarfs. Although Proxima Cen b orbits within its star's habitable zone, multiple plausible evolutionary paths could have generated different environments that may or may not be habitable. Here we use 1D coupled climate-photochemical models to generate self-consistent atmospheres for evolutionary scenarios predicted in our companion paper (Barnes et al., 2016). These include high-O2, high-CO2, and more Earth-like atmospheres, with either oxidizing or reducing compositions. We show that these modeled environments can be habitable or uninhabitable at Proxima Cen b's position in the habitable zone. We use radiative transfer models to generate synthetic spectra and thermal phase curves for these simulated environments, and instrument models to explore our ability…
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