# Exoplanet Biosignatures: Observational Prospects

**Authors:** Yuka Fujii, Daniel Angerhausen, Russell Deitrick, Shawn, Domagal-Goldman, John Lee Grenfell, Yasunori Hori, Stephen R. Kane, Enric, Palle, Heike Rauer, Nicholas Siegler, Karl Stapelfeldt, Kevin B. Stevenson

arXiv: 1705.07098 · 2018-08-21

## TL;DR

This paper reviews the prospects and challenges of characterizing potentially habitable exoplanets with upcoming observational technologies, emphasizing biosignature detection and planetary context analysis for astrobiology.

## Contribution

It provides a comprehensive overview of future observational capabilities and strategies for detecting biosignatures and planetary features on temperate terrestrial exoplanets.

## Key findings

- JWST and 30-meter telescopes will enable chemical analysis of nearby Earth-like planets.
- Direct imaging missions are necessary for spectroscopic studies around solar-type stars.
- Initial characterization of nearby targets will guide future detailed surveys.

## Abstract

Exoplanet hunting efforts have revealed the prevalence of exotic worlds with diverse properties, including Earth-sized bodies, which has fueled our endeavor to search for life beyond the Solar System. Accumulating experiences in astrophysical, chemical, and climatological characterization of uninhabitable planets are paving the way to characterization of potentially habitable planets. In this paper, we review our possibilities and limitations in characterizing temperate terrestrial planets with future observational capabilities through 2030s and beyond, as a basis of a broad range of discussions on how to advance "astrobiology" with exoplanets. We discuss the observability of not only the proposed biosignature candidates themselves, but also of more general planetary properties that provide circumstantial evidence, since the evaluation of any biosignature candidate relies on their context. Characterization of temperate Earth-size planets in the coming years will focus on those around nearby late-type stars. JWST and later 30 meter-class ground-based telescopes will empower their chemical investigations. Spectroscopic studies of potentially habitable planets around solar-type stars will likely require a designated spacecraft mission for direct imaging, leveraging technologies that are already being developed and tested as part of the WFIRST mission. Successful initial characterization of a few nearby targets will be an important touchstone toward a more detailed scrutiny and a larger survey that are envisioned beyond 2030. The broad outlook this paper presents may help develop new observational techniques to detect relevant features as well as frameworks to diagnose planets based on the observables.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.07098