Assessment of Isoprene as a Possible Biosignature Gas in Exoplanets with Anoxic Atmospheres
Zhuchang Zhan, Sara Seager, Janusz Jurand Petkowski, Clara, Sousa-Silva, Sukrit Ranjan, Jingcheng Huang, and William Bains

TL;DR
This study evaluates isoprene as a potential biosignature gas in anoxic exoplanet atmospheres, modeling its formation, destruction, and detectability with JWST, and finds it could be detectable under extreme production rates.
Contribution
It introduces isoprene as a novel biosignature gas candidate and assesses its detectability in exoplanet atmospheres using photochemical modeling and spectroscopy.
Findings
Isoprene formation is thermodynamically disfavored abiotically.
Detectable isoprene levels require unrealistically high production rates.
Spectral features of isoprene may be confused with methane.
Abstract
Research for possible biosignature gases on habitable exoplanet atmosphere is accelerating. We add isoprene, C5H8, to the roster of biosignature gases. We found that formation of isoprene geochemical formation is highly thermodynamically disfavored and has no known abiotic false positives. The isoprene production rate on Earth rivals that of methane (~ 500 Tg yr-1). On Earth, isoprene is rapidly destroyed by oxygen-containing radicals, but its production is ubiquitous to a diverse array of evolutionarily distant organisms, from bacteria to plants and animals-few, if any at all, volatile secondary metabolite has a larger evolutionary reach. While non-photochemical sinks of isoprene may exist, the destruction of isoprene in an anoxic atmosphere is mainly driven by photochemistry. Motivated by the concept that isoprene might accumulate in anoxic environments, we model the photochemistry…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
