Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE): V. Diagnostic potential of a mid-infrared space-interferometer for studying Earth analogs
Eleonora Alei (1, 2), Bj\"orn S. Konrad (1, 2), Daniel, Angerhausen (1, 2, 3), John Lee Grenfell (4), Paul Molli\`ere (5),, Sascha P. Quanz (1, 2), Sarah Rugheimer (6), Fabian Wunderlich (4), and, the LIFE collaboration ((1) ETH Zurich, Institute for Particle Physics &

TL;DR
LIFE, a space interferometer, can characterize Earth-like exoplanets' atmospheres, detecting key biosignatures like O3 and CH4, aiding future habitability assessments through simulated spectral analysis.
Contribution
This study demonstrates LIFE's capability to identify atmospheric features of Earth analogs and assesses the impact of spectral resolution and S/N on detecting biosignatures.
Findings
LIFE can detect key spectral features of Earth-like planets at 10 pc.
Higher S/N improves abundance estimates of O3 and CH4.
Cloudy planet retrievals can characterize atmospheric composition, but not thermal structure.
Abstract
An important future goal in exoplanetology is to detect and characterize potentially habitable planets. Using nulling interferometry, LIFE will allow us to constrain the radius and effective temperature of (terrestrial) exoplanets, as well as provide unique information about their atmospheric structure and composition. We explore the potential of LIFE in characterizing emission spectra of Earth at various stages of its evolution. We perform Bayesian retrievals on simulated spectra of 8 different scenarios, which correspond to cloud-free and cloudy spectra of four different epochs of the evolution of the Earth. Assuming a distance of 10 pc and a Sun-like host star, we simulate observations obtained with LIFE using its simulator LIFEsim, considering all major astrophysical noise sources. With the nominal spectral resolution (R=50) and signal-to-noise ratio (assumed to be S/N=10 at 11.2…
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