The Curious Case of Argon
Margarita Safonova, Alfia Saini

TL;DR
This paper proposes that atmospheric argon could serve as a bioindicator of complex life on potentially habitable rocky planets, expanding the scope of biosignature detection in astrobiology.
Contribution
It introduces the novel idea that argon in planetary atmospheres may indicate highly organized life, providing a new approach for biosignature identification.
Findings
Argon can be a bioindicator of complex life.
Argon exhibits organprotective properties under hypoxic conditions.
Detection methods for atmospheric argon are discussed.
Abstract
In the modern search for life elsewhere in the Universe, we are broadly looking for the following: the planets similar to Earth - physical indicators of habitability, and the manifestation of life - the biological signatures. A biosignature is a measured parameter that has a high probability of being caused by the living organisms, either atmospheric gas species or some surface features. Therefore, the focus of a search is on a product or phenomena produced by the living systems, mostly by microorganisms as these are the most abundant on our planet like, say, methane. However, we may need to distinguish the terms `biosignature' and `bioindicator'. A biosignature is what living organisms produce - a bioproduct, while a bioindicator may be anything necessary for life as we know it, such as water or a rocky planet. Oxygen in this case is a double biomarker; first, it is a byproduct of…
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