Searching for Biosignatures in Exoplanetary Impact Ejecta
Gianni Cataldi, Alexis Brandeker, Philippe Th\'ebault, Kelsi Singer,, Engy Ahmed, Bernard L. de Vries, Anna Neubeck, G\"oran Olofsson

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of detecting biosignatures and geological features in dust ejected from exoplanets during impact events, assessing its observability and implications for astrobiology.
Contribution
It introduces a model for the evolution and detectability of impact-ejected dust and evaluates the feasibility of identifying biosignatures from such material.
Findings
Dust mass ejected is comparable to zodiacal dust.
Two dust populations with different evolution timescales are identified.
Detecting biological matter directly remains extremely challenging.
Abstract
With the number of confirmed rocky exoplanets increasing steadily, their characterisation and the search for exoplanetary biospheres is becoming an increasingly urgent issue in astrobiology. We aim to investigate the possibility of characterising an exoplanet (in terms of habitability, geology, presence of life etc.) by studying material ejected from the surface during an impact event. For given parameters characterising the impact event, we estimate the escaping mass and assess its subsequent collisional evolution in a circumstellar orbit, assuming a Sun-like host star. We calculate the fractional luminosity of the dust as a function of time after the impact event and study its detectability with current and future instrumentation. We consider the possibility to constrain the dust composition, giving information on the geology or the presence of a biosphere. As examples, we investigate…
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