Organic Haze as a Biosignature in Anoxic Earth-like Atmospheres
Giada N. Arney, Shawn D. Domagal-Goldman, Victoria S. Meadows

TL;DR
This study models how organic haze formation on Archean-like planets depends on methane, carbon dioxide, and sulfur gases, suggesting haze detection could indicate biological activity on exoplanets.
Contribution
It demonstrates that organic sulfur gases can significantly lower the methane-to-CO2 ratio needed for haze formation, impacting biosignature detection strategies.
Findings
Organic sulfur gases enhance haze formation at lower CH4/CO2 ratios.
Haze detection at low CH4/CO2 ratios may indicate biological sulfur gases.
Spectral features of haze are detectable at low spectral resolutions.
Abstract
Early Earth may have hosted a biologically-mediated global organic haze during the Archean eon (3.8-2.5 billion years ago). This haze would have significantly impacted multiple aspects of our planet, including its potential for habitability and its spectral appearance. Here, we model worlds with Archean-like levels of carbon dioxide orbiting the ancient sun and an M4V dwarf (GJ 876) and show that organic haze formation requires methane fluxes consistent with estimated Earth-like biological production rates. On planets with high fluxes of biogenic organic sulfur gases (CS2, OCS, CH3SH, and CH3SCH3), photochemistry involving these gases can drive haze formation at lower CH4/CO2 ratios than methane photochemistry alone. For a planet orbiting the sun, at 30x the modern organic sulfur gas flux, haze forms at a CH4/CO2 ratio 20% lower than at 1x the modern organic sulfur flux. For a planet…
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