Mars as an Exoplanet: Lessons from a Planet at the Edge of Habitability
Stephen R. Kane, Paul K. Byrne, Skylar D'Angiolillo, Michelle L. Hill, Emma L. Miles, David A. Brain, Shannon M. Curry, Joana R.C. Voigt

TL;DR
This paper explores how studying Mars enhances our understanding of exoplanet habitability, focusing on planetary evolution, atmospheric processes, and detection methods for Mars-like exoplanets.
Contribution
It synthesizes Mars research and exoplanet studies to identify key science questions and methods for characterizing potentially habitable rocky planets beyond the Solar System.
Findings
Mars's atmospheric evolution informs exoplanet habitability models.
Detection strategies for Mars analogs are evaluated with current and future telescopes.
Planetary mission data provide insights into volatile processes relevant to exoplanets.
Abstract
Mars is the Solar System's canonical small, rocky planet that transitioned from early geologic activity and surface liquid water to a cold and arid planet with a thin, cold, CO-dominated atmosphere. The evolution of Mars, in the context of such planetary parameters as size, mass, atmosphere, insolation flux, magnetosphere, and impact history, harbor important diagnostics regarding the development and sustainability of habitable surface conditions. In this work, we synthesize how the study of Mars contributes to our understanding of exoplanet processes, such as volatile delivery and loss, photochemistry, climate evolution (including CO condensation and atmospheric loss), obliquity forcing, planetary architecture, and the role of intrinsic magnetism. We also evaluate optimal methods and prospects for detecting and characterizing potential Mars analogs beyond the Solar System. We…
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