Phosphine as a Biosignature Gas in Exoplanet Atmospheres
Clara Sousa-Silva, Sara Seager, Sukrit Ranjan, Janusz J. Petkowski,, Zhuchang Zhan, Renyu Hu, William Bains

TL;DR
This paper evaluates phosphine (PH$_3$) as a potential biosignature gas in exoplanet atmospheres, analyzing its detectability, production fluxes, and spectral features, highlighting its promise and challenges for future observations.
Contribution
The study provides the first detailed assessment of phosphine as a biosignature, including its atmospheric accumulation, spectral detectability, and comparison with other gases, expanding the scope of biosignature gases considered.
Findings
PH$_3$ can reach detectable levels on certain exoplanets with sufficient surface flux.
PH$_3$ has three strong spectral features, making it distinguishable in spectra.
Detection of PH$_3$ requires tens of hours of JWST observation.
Abstract
A long-term goal of exoplanet studies is the identification and detection of biosignature gases. Beyond the most discussed biosignature gas O, only a handful of gases have been considered in detail. Here we evaluate phosphine (PH). On Earth, PH is associated with anaerobic ecosystems, and as such is a potential biosignature gas on anoxic exoplanets. We simulate CO and Hdominated habitable terrestrial planet atmospheres. We find that PH can accumulate to detectable concentrations on planets with surface production fluxes of 10-10 cm s (corresponding to surface concentrations of 10s of ppb to 100s of ppm), depending on atmospheric composition and UV flux. While high, such surface fluxes are comparable to the global terrestrial production rate of CH (10 cm s) and below the maximum local terrestrial PH…
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