Reflected spectroscopy of small exoplanets III: probing the UV band to measure biosignature gasses
Mario Damiano, Renyu Hu, Bertrand Mennesson

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that ultraviolet spectroscopy can effectively detect and measure biosignature gases like O$_2$ and O$_3$ in Proterozoic Earth-like exoplanets, complementing visible and near-infrared observations for habitability assessment.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method using ultraviolet wavelengths for detecting biosignature gases in exoplanets, expanding observational capabilities beyond visible spectra.
Findings
Ozone (O$_3$) can be detected in UV for low O$_2$ levels.
UV detection of O$_3$ is robust at modest spectral resolution and S/N.
Extending to near-infrared provides additional atmospheric information.
Abstract
Direct-imaging observations of terrestrial exoplanets will enable their atmospheric characterization and habitability assessment. Considering the Earth, the key atmospheric signatures for the biosphere is O and the photochemical product O. However, this O-O biosignature is not detectable in the visible wavelengths for most of the time after the emergence of oxygenic photosynthesis life (i.e., the Proterozoic Earth). Here we demonstrate spectroscopic observations in the ultraviolet wavelengths for detecting and characterizing O and O in Proterozoic Earth-like planets, using ExoReL. For an O mixing ratio 2 to 3 orders of magnitude less than the present-day Earth, and an O mixing ratio of , we find that O can be detected and its mixing ratio can be measured precisely (within order of magnitude) in the ultraviolet ($0.25-0.4\…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Astro and Planetary Science
