A Geologically Robust Procedure For Observing Rocky Exoplanets to Ensure that Detection of Atmospheric Oxygen is an Earth-Like Biosignature
Carey M. Lisse, Steven J. Desch, Cayman T. Unterborn, Stephen R. Kane,, Patrick R. Young, Hilairy E. Hartnett, Natalie R. Hinkel, Sang Heon Shim,, Eric E. Mamajek, Noam R. Izenberg

TL;DR
This paper proposes a comprehensive, step-by-step observational strategy to reliably identify biosignatures like oxygen in exoplanet atmospheres, minimizing false positives by considering geochemical and observational factors.
Contribution
It introduces a new, detailed procedure for observing and interpreting oxygen as a biosignature, emphasizing geochemical context and multi-stage verification.
Findings
Earth and TRAPPIST-1e pass the procedure, indicating potential biosignatures.
The strategy reduces false positives by excluding planets with non-Earth-like geochemistry.
Application to known systems demonstrates the procedure's effectiveness.
Abstract
In the next decades, the astrobiological community will debate whether the first observations of oxygen in an exoplanets atmosphere signifies life, so it is critical to establish procedures now for collection and interpretation of such data. We present a step-by-step observational strategy for using oxygen as a robust biosignature, to prioritize exoplanet targets and design future observations. It is premised on avoiding planets lacking subaerial weathering of continents, which would imply geochemical cycles drastically different from Earths, precluding use of oxygen as a biosignature. The strategy starts with the most readily obtained data: semi-major axis and stellar luminosity to ensure residence in the habitable zone; stellar XUV flux, to ensure an exoplanet can retain a secondary (outgassed) atmosphere. Next, high-precision mass and radius information should be combined with…
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