Understanding planetary context to enable life detection on exoplanets and test the Copernican principle
Joshua Krissansen-Totton, Maggie Thompson, Max L. Galloway, and, Jonathan J. Fortney

TL;DR
This paper reviews how planetary context influences the detection of biosignatures like oxygen and methane on exoplanets, emphasizing the importance of understanding abiotic processes to confirm biological origins.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive framework for interpreting biosignatures in exoplanet atmospheres, highlighting current knowledge gaps and testable scenarios for abiotic oxygen and methane.
Findings
Abiotic oxygen scenarios may be testable with upcoming observations.
Detecting methane alongside CO2 and low CO:CH4 ratios suggests biological activity.
Understanding planetary context is crucial for interpreting biosignatures accurately.
Abstract
The search for life on exoplanets is motivated by the universal ways in which life could modify its planetary environment. Atmospheric gases such as oxygen and methane are promising candidates for such environmental modification due to the evolutionary benefits their production would confer. However, confirming that these gases are produced by life, rather than by geochemical or astrophysical processes, will require a thorough understanding of planetary context, including the expected counterfactual atmospheric evolution for lifeless planets. Here, we evaluate current understanding of planetary context for several candidate biosignatures and their upcoming observability. We review the contextual framework for oxygen and describe how conjectured abiotic oxygen scenarios may be testable. In contrast to oxygen, current understanding of how planetary context controls non-biological methane…
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