Photosynthetic exergy I. Thermodynamic limits for habitable-zone planets
Giovanni Covone, Amedeo Balbi

TL;DR
This paper develops a thermodynamic framework to quantify the maximum useful work from stellar radiation on habitable planets, constraining photosynthesis potential based on stellar type and radiation properties.
Contribution
It introduces a radiative-thermodynamic model to establish exergy-based bounds on photosynthetic power and absorption wavelengths for habitable exoplanets, advancing understanding of biosignature limits.
Findings
Photosynthesis is confined to near-infrared bands around Solar-type stars.
Exergy fluxes are significantly higher around FGK stars compared to late M dwarfs.
Earth's photosynthetic efficiency is well below the thermodynamic upper bounds.
Abstract
Photosynthesis is central to Earth's biosphere and a prime candidate for sustaining complex life on habitable exoplanets, yet a thermodynamically consistent treatment of the work potential of stellar radiation at planetary surfaces is still lacking. We develop a radiative-thermodynamic framework that quantifies the maximum useful work extractable for a given star-planet configuration and yields exergy-based bounds on photosynthetic power and long-wavelength absorption cutoffs. From these we derive kinetically constrained red limits for high- photochemistry and apply them to Earth-like planets receiving the same bolometric flux from FGK and M blackbody hosts, computing thresholded photon supplies and truncated exergy fluxes below a photosystem II red limit. For such planets the constraints confine single-photon oxygenic photosynthesis to near-infrared bands around Solar-type…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
