CO$_2$ ocean bistability on terrestrial exoplanets
R.J. Graham, Tim Lichtenberg, Ray Pierrehumbert

TL;DR
This study explores how CO$_2$ can create bistable climate states on rocky exoplanets, with implications for planetary habitability and observable atmospheric signatures, especially around G- and F-type stars.
Contribution
It introduces a new model showing CO$_2$ bistability on exoplanets, highlighting the role of surface CO$_2$ condensation in climate stability and potential observational differences.
Findings
Bistability occurs on planets orbiting G- and F-type stars.
CO$_2$ condensation can lead to stable cool climate states.
Climate oscillations between states depend on instellation and weathering efficiency.
Abstract
Cycling of carbon dioxide between the atmosphere and interior of rocky planets can stabilize global climate and enable planetary surface temperatures above freezing over geologic time. However, variations in global carbon budget and unstable feedback cycles between planetary sub-systems may destabilize the climate of rocky exoplanets toward regimes unknown in the Solar System. Here, we perform clear-sky atmospheric radiative transfer and surface weathering simulations to probe the stability of climate equilibria for rocky, ocean-bearing exoplanets at instellations relevant for planetary systems in the outer regions of the circumstellar habitable zone. Our simulations suggest that planets orbiting G- and F-type stars (but not M-type stars) may display bistability between an Earth-like climate state with efficient carbon sequestration and an alternative stable climate equilibrium where…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
