Detectability Simulations of a NIR Surface Biosignature on Proxima Centauri b with Future Space Observatories
Connor O. Metz, Nancy Y. Kiang, Geronimo L. Villanueva, Mary N., Parenteau, Vincent Kofman

TL;DR
This study assesses the potential to detect a near-infrared biosignature on Proxima Centauri b using future space telescopes, showing detectability depends on organism abundance and atmospheric conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a simulation framework combining climate models and telescope observations to evaluate biosignature detectability on exoplanets.
Findings
Biosignature detectable if organism covers >1-4% surface area.
Detectability not significantly hindered by clouds or haze.
Potential detectability within 15 parsecs, pending further research.
Abstract
Telescope missions are currently being designed which will make direct imaging of habitable exoplanets possible in the near future, and studies are needed to quantify the detectability of biosignature features in the planet's reflectance spectrum. We simulated the detectability of a NIR-absorbing surface biosignature feature with simulated observations of the nearby exoplanet Proxima Centauri b. We modeled a biosignature spectral feature with a reflectance spectrum based on an anoxygenic photosynthetic bacterial species that has strong absorption at 1 um, which could make it well suited for life on an M-dwarf hosted planet. We modeled the distribution of this organism across the planet's surface based on climate states from a 3D General Circulation Model (GCM), which were Archean and Proterozoic-like exo-Earth analogues. We included the GCM runs' prognostically simulated water clouds…
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