Warm, water-depleted rocky exoplanets with surface ionic liquids: A proposed class for planetary habitability
Rachana Agrawal, Sara Seager, Iaroslav Iakubivskyi, Weston P. Buchanan, Ana Glidden, Maxwell D. Seager, William Bains, Jingcheng Huang, Janusz J. Petkowski

TL;DR
This paper proposes that warm, water-depleted rocky exoplanets could support life through surface ionic liquids formed from planetary materials, expanding the concept of planetary habitability beyond water-based environments.
Contribution
It introduces ionic liquids as a new potential solvent for life on planets with thin atmospheres, supported by laboratory evidence of their formation from common planetary substances.
Findings
Ionic liquids can form from sulfuric acid and organic molecules under planetary conditions.
Ionic liquids have negligible vapor pressure, allowing persistence on warm, water-depleted planets.
They can dissolve biomolecules, enabling potential biocatalytic life processes.
Abstract
The discovery of thousands of exoplanets and the emergence of telescopes capable of exoplanet atmospheric characterization have intensified the search for habitable worlds. Due to selection biases, many exoplanets under study are planets deemed inhospitable because their surfaces are too warm to support liquid water. We propose that such planets could still support life through ionic liquids: Liquid salts with negligible vapor pressure that can persist on warm planets with thin atmospheres, where liquid water cannot. Ionic liquids have not previously been considered as naturally occurring substances, and thus have not been discussed in planetary science. We demonstrate in laboratory experiments that ionic liquids can form from planetary materials: Sulfuric acid combined with nitrogen-containing organic molecules. Sulfuric acid can be volcanic in origin, and organic compounds are…
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