Is ozone a reliable proxy for molecular oxygen? I. The O2-O3 relationship for Earth-like atmospheres
Thea Kozakis, Jo\~ao M. Mendon\c{c}a, Lars A. Buchhave

TL;DR
This study investigates whether ozone can reliably indicate molecular oxygen levels in Earth-like exoplanet atmospheres, revealing that the relationship varies significantly with stellar UV flux and complicates direct inference of O2 from O3 measurements.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that the O2-O3 relationship is highly dependent on stellar UV spectra, challenging the use of ozone as a straightforward proxy for oxygen in exoplanet atmospheres.
Findings
O3 levels can increase as O2 decreases around hotter stars due to UV-driven photochemistry.
The O2-O3 relationship varies significantly with stellar type, affecting biosignature interpretation.
Inferring precise O2 levels from O3 alone is extremely difficult without additional stellar UV information.
Abstract
Molecular oxygen (O2) paired with a reducing gas is regarded as a promising biosignature pair for the atmospheric characterization of terrestrial exoplanets. In circumstances when O2 may not be detectable in a planetary atmosphere (e.g., at mid-IR wavelengths) it has been suggested that ozone (O3), the photochemical product of O2, could be used as a proxy to infer the presence of O2. However, O3 production has a nonlinear dependence on O2 and is strongly influenced by the UV spectrum of the host star. To evaluate the reliability of O3 as a proxy for O2, we used Atmos, a 1D coupled climate/photochemistry code, to study the O2-O3 relationship for "Earth-like" habitable zone planets around a variety of stellar hosts (G0V-M5V) and O2 abundances. Overall, we found that the O2-O3 relationship differed significantly with stellar hosts and resulted in different trends for hotter stars (G0V-K2V)…
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.
