Earth: Atmospheric Evolution of a Habitable Planet
Stephanie L. Olson, Edward W. Schwieterman, Christopher T. Reinhard,, Timothy W. Lyons

TL;DR
This paper reviews Earth's atmospheric evolution over 4.5 billion years, highlighting its implications for planetary habitability, biosignatures, and the diversity of potentially habitable exoplanets.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of Earth's atmospheric changes across geological eons and discusses their relevance for understanding habitability and biosignatures on exoplanets.
Findings
Earth's atmosphere has undergone dramatic changes over billions of years.
Modern atmosphere is just a snapshot of Earth's long-term evolution.
Various atmospheric states offer insights into potential exoplanet habitability.
Abstract
Our present-day atmosphere is often used as an analog for potentially habitable exoplanets, but Earth's atmosphere has changed dramatically throughout its 4.5 billion year history. For example, molecular oxygen is abundant in the atmosphere today but was absent on the early Earth. Meanwhile, the physical and chemical evolution of Earth's atmosphere has also resulted in major swings in surface temperature, at times resulting in extreme glaciation or warm greenhouse climates. Despite this dynamic and occasionally dramatic history, the Earth has been persistently habitable--and, in fact, inhabited--for roughly 4 billion years. Understanding Earth's momentous changes and its enduring habitability is essential as a guide to the diversity of habitable planetary environments that may exist beyond our solar system and for ultimately recognizing spectroscopic fingerprints of life elsewhere in…
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