The Pale Orange Dot: The Spectrum and Habitability of Hazy Archean Earth
Giada Arney, Shawn D. Domagal-Goldman, Victoria S. Meadows, Eric T., Wolf, Edward Schwieterman, Benjamin Charnay, Mark Claire, Eric H\'ebrard,, Melissa G. Trainer

TL;DR
This study uses coupled climate-photochemical-microphysical simulations to show that haze-rich Archean Earth could sustain habitable conditions despite cooling effects, with implications for exoplanet habitability and biosignature detection.
Contribution
It presents the first self-consistent modeling of Archean Earth's haze effects, demonstrating potential habitability and UV shielding benefits of organic-rich hazes.
Findings
Haze can cool Earth by ~20 K but still allow liquid water.
Thick hazes self-limit due to self-shielding, preventing catastrophic cooling.
Haze significantly reduces surface UV flux, aiding organism survival.
Abstract
Recognizing whether a planet can support life is a primary goal of future exoplanet spectral characterization missions, but past research on habitability assessment has largely ignored the vastly different conditions that have existed in our planet's long habitable history. This study presents simulations of a habitable yet dramatically different phase of Earth's history, when the atmosphere contained a Titan-like organic-rich haze. Prior work has claimed a haze-rich Archean Earth (3.8-2.5 billion years ago) would be frozen due to the haze's cooling effects. However, no previous studies have self-consistently taken into account climate, photochemistry, and fractal hazes. Here, we demonstrate using coupled climate-photochemical-microphysical simulations that hazes can cool the planet's surface by about 20 K, but habitable conditions with liquid surface water could be maintained with a…
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