K2-18b Does Not Meet The Standards of Evidence For Life
Kevin B. Stevenson, Jacob Lustig-Yaeger, E. M. May, Ravi K. Kopparapu, Thomas J. Fauchez, Jacob Haqq-Misra, Mary Anne Limbach, Edward W. Schwieterman, Kristin S. Sotzen, and Shang-Min Tsai

TL;DR
This study critically reevaluates claims of biosignatures in K2-18b's atmosphere, demonstrating that instrumental systematics and noise significantly affect spectral interpretations, and finds no statistically significant evidence for life indicators.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive independent analysis of JWST data, highlighting the impact of instrument systematics on biosignature detection and offering improved reduction methodologies.
Findings
No significant evidence for DMS/DMDS in K2-18b's atmosphere.
Detection of CH4 confirmed; CO2 favored as dominant gas.
Instrumental noise and systematics dominate the spectral data.
Abstract
K2-18b, a temperate sub-Neptune, has garnered significant attention due to claims of possible biosignatures in its atmosphere. Low-confidence detections of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and/or dimethyl disulfide (DMDS) have sparked considerable debate, primarily around arguments that their absorption features are not uniquely identifiable. Here, we consider all five questions from the astrobiology standards of evidence framework, starting with: Have we detected an authentic signal? To answer this, we analyzed publicly-available JWST observations of K2-18b using independent data reduction and spectral retrieval methodologies. Our comprehensive set of reductions demonstrates that the MIRI transit spectrum is highly susceptible to unresolved instrumental systematics. Applying different wavelength binning schemes yields a potpourri of planet spectra that then lead to a wide assortment of…
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