Observability of ultraviolet N I lines in the atmosphere of transiting Earth-like planets
Mitchell E. Young, Luca Fossati, Colin Johnstone, Michael Salz,, Herbert Lichtenegger, Kevin France, Helmut Lammer, Patricio E. Cubillos

TL;DR
This study explores the potential for detecting atmospheric nitrogen in Earth-like exoplanets using ultraviolet spectroscopy with LUVOIR, highlighting the challenges and future directions for such observations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of atomic nitrogen detection prospects in exoplanet atmospheres using UV transmission spectroscopy with LUVOIR.
Findings
Detection of N I lines requires hundreds of transits at 1 pc distance.
Detection feasibility decreases with increasing distance and lower stellar UV flux.
Detecting atomic nitrogen in Earth-like planets around Sun-like stars is currently impractical.
Abstract
Nitrogen is a biosignature gas that cannot be maintained in its Earth-like ratio with CO under abiotic conditions. It has also proven to be notoriously hard to detect at optical and infrared wavelengths. Fortunately, the ultraviolet region, which has only recently started being explored for terrestrial exoplanets, may provide new opportunities to characterise exoplanetary atmospheric nitrogen. In this work, the future prospects for detecting atomic nitrogen absorption lines in the transmission spectrum of an Earth-like planet orbiting in the habitable zone of a Sun-like star with LUVOIR are explored. Using the non-local thermodynamic equilibrium spectral synthesis code Cloudy, we produce a far-ultraviolet atomic transmission spectrum for an Earth-Sun-like system, and identify several nitrogen features, including both N I and N II lines. We calculate the number of transits required…
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