Gaian bottlenecks and planetary habitability maintained by evolving model biospheres: The ExoGaia model
Arwen E. Nicholson, David M. Wilkinson, Hywel T. P. Williams, and, Timothy M. Lenton

TL;DR
This paper introduces the ExoGaia model, demonstrating how microbial biospheres can regulate planetary temperatures and influence long-term habitability, highlighting the importance of biotic feedback mechanisms in exoplanet habitability.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel model of evolving biospheres interacting with planetary atmospheres, illustrating the potential for life to maintain or fail to sustain habitability through feedback processes.
Findings
Microbial biospheres can prevent planets from becoming inhospitable.
Geochemistry significantly influences long-term habitability.
Existence of 'Gaian bottlenecks' where life either persists or goes extinct.
Abstract
The search for habitable exoplanets inspires the question - how do habitable planets form? Planet habitability models traditionally focus on abiotic processes and neglect a biotic response to changing conditions on an inhabited planet. The Gaia hypothesis postulates that life influences the Earth's feedback mechanisms to form a self-regulating system, and hence that life can maintain habitable conditions on its host planet. If life has a strong influence, it will have a role in determining a planet's habitability over time. We present the ExoGaia model - a model of simple 'planets' host to evolving microbial biospheres. Microbes interact with their host planet via consumption and excretion of atmospheric chemicals. Model planets orbit a 'star' which provides incoming radiation, and atmospheric chemicals have either an albedo, or a heat-trapping property. Planetary temperatures can…
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