Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1781322 Planetary and Space Science 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Computation outer limit life supporting zone of selected Kepler planetary candidates.•Habitable zones for exotic life based on water, water/ammonia mixture, sulfuric acid.•Derived restrictions on stellar and planetary input parameters for habitability.•Kepler planetary candidates likely in life supporting zone.•No strong increase in surface temperature if CO2 pressure larger approx 25 bar.

CO2 rich atmospheres have been considered for the outer limit of the classic water habitable zone. Here we provide a database for the outer limit of the life supporting zone consisting of a sulfuric acid, a water and a water/ammonia mixture (15 wt% ammonia) habitable zone for virtual exoplanets having CO2-rich atmospheres and orbiting G-, K-, or M-dwarf stars. We used recent CO2 line and continuum absorption data for CO2 pressures up to 100 bar for our simulations. Scenarios for different stellar spectra, stellar fluxes, planetary surface albedos, atmospheric pressures and planetary masses are explored. One notable result is that the surface temperature does not strongly increase if CO2 pressure is larger than approximately 25 bar, due to increased Rayleigh scattering or CO2 condensation at the surface and a thereby reduced greenhouse effect in these cases. The database is created for virtual exoplanets and applied to Kepler planetary candidates. All of the considered planetary candidates likely lie within the outer limit of the life supporting zone.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geophysics
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