Atmospheric Seasonality as an Exoplanet Biosignature
Stephanie L. Olson, Edward W. Schwieterman, Christopher T. Reinhard,, Andy Ridgwell, Stephen R. Kane, Victoria S. Meadows, Timothy W. Lyons

TL;DR
This paper explores atmospheric seasonality as a novel biosignature for detecting life on exoplanets, emphasizing its potential to provide direct insights into biological activity through temporal atmospheric variations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of biological and abiological factors affecting atmospheric seasonality and demonstrates its potential as a biosignature, including a case study on low O2 worlds.
Findings
Seasonality in atmospheric gases can indicate biological activity.
UV observations of O3 seasonality could reveal life on low O2 planets.
Future telescopes should include UV capabilities for biosignature detection.
Abstract
Current investigations of exoplanet biosignatures have focused on static evidence of life, such as the presence of biogenic gases like O2 or CH4. However, the expected diversity of terrestrial planet atmospheres and the likelihood of both false positives and false negatives for conventional biosignatures motivate exploration of additional life detection strategies, including time-varying signals. Seasonal variation in atmospheric composition is a biologically modulated phenomenon on Earth that may occur elsewhere because it arises naturally from the interplay between the biosphere and time-variable insolation. The search for seasonality as a biosignature would avoid many assumptions about specific metabolisms and provide an opportunity to directly quantify biological fluxes--allowing us to characterize, rather than simply recognize, biospheres on exoplanets. Despite this potential,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
