Detectability of biosignatures on LHS 1140 b
Fabian Wunderlich, Markus Scheucher, John Lee Grenfell, Franz, Schreier, Clara Sousa-Silva, Mareike Godolt, Heike Rauer

TL;DR
This study assesses the detectability of biosignatures on the habitable-zone exoplanet LHS 1140 b using upcoming telescopes, by simulating various atmospheric compositions and spectral observations.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling approach to evaluate biosignature detectability on LHS 1140 b with JWST and ELT, considering different atmospheric compositions and observational strategies.
Findings
Oxygen and ozone are low in H2-dominated atmospheres due to chemical sinks.
Potential biosignatures like NH3, PH3, CH3Cl, and N2O are detectable within 20-100 hours of observation.
Detection feasibility depends on atmospheric clarity and composition, especially the presence of hazes.
Abstract
Terrestrial extrasolar planets around low-mass stars are prime targets when searching for atmospheric biosignatures with current and near-future telescopes. The habitable-zone Super-Earth LHS 1140 b could hold a hydrogen-dominated atmosphere and is an excellent candidate for detecting atmospheric features. In this study, we investigate how the instellation and planetary parameters influence the atmospheric climate, chemistry, and spectral appearance of LHS 1140 b. We study the detectability of selected molecules, in particular potential biosignatures, with the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and Extremely Large Telescope (ELT). In a first step we use the coupled climate-chemistry model, 1D-TERRA, to simulate a range of assumed atmospheric chemical compositions dominated by H and CO. Further, we vary the concentrations of CH by several orders of magnitude. In a…
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