# Detectability of atmospheric features of Earth-like planets in the   habitable zone around M dwarfs

**Authors:** F. Wunderlich, M. Godolt, J.L. Grenfell, S. St\"adt, A.M.S. Smith, S., Gebauer, F. Schreier, P. Hedelt, H. Rauer

arXiv: 1905.02560 · 2019-05-08

## TL;DR

This study assesses the potential for JWST to detect atmospheric features of Earth-like planets in the habitable zones of M dwarfs, highlighting the influence of stellar type, atmospheric composition, and observational strategies.

## Contribution

It introduces a combined climate-chemistry and radiative transfer modeling approach to evaluate spectral feature detectability around various M dwarfs with JWST.

## Key findings

- Detection of key atmospheric molecules is feasible around mid to late M dwarfs within a few transits.
- Early M dwarfs require more than ten transits for atmospheric feature detection.
- 276 known M dwarfs are identified as promising targets for atmospheric characterization.

## Abstract

We investigate the detectability of atmospheric spectral features of Earth-like planets in the habitable zone (HZ) around M dwarfs with the future James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). We use a coupled 1D climate-chemistry-model to simulate the influence of a range of observed and modelled M-dwarf spectra on Earth-like planets. The simulated atmospheres served as input for the calculation of the transmission spectra of the hypothetical planets, using a line-by-line spectral radiative transfer model. To investigate the spectroscopic detectability of absorption bands with JWST we further developed a signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) model and applied it to our transmission spectra. High abundances of CH$_4$ and H$_2$O in the atmosphere of Earth-like planets around mid to late M dwarfs increase the detectability of the corresponding spectral features compared to early M-dwarf planets. Increased temperatures in the middle atmosphere of mid- to late-type M-dwarf planets expand the atmosphere and further increase the detectability of absorption bands. To detect CH$_4$, H$_2$O, and CO$_2$ in the atmosphere of an Earth-like planet around a mid to late M dwarf observing only one transit with JWST could be enough up to a distance of 4 pc and less than ten transits up to a distance of 10 pc. As a consequence of saturation limits of JWST and less pronounced absorption bands, the detection of spectral features of hypothetical Earth-like planets around most early M dwarfs would require more than ten transits. We identify 276 existing M dwarfs (including GJ 1132, TRAPPIST-1, GJ 1214, and LHS 1140) around which atmospheric absorption features of hypothetical Earth-like planets could be detected by co-adding just a few transits. We show that using transmission spectroscopy, JWST could provide enough precision to be able to partly characterise the atmosphere of Earth-like TESS planets around mid to late M dwarfs.

## Full text

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## Figures

13 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.02560/full.md

## References

156 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.02560/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.02560