O'Malley-James Jack T, Greaves Jane S, Raven John A, Cockell Charles S
1School of Physics and Astronomy, University of St Andrews, North Haugh, St Andrews, Fife, UK.
2Division of Plant Sciences, University of Dundee at TJHI, The James Hutton Institute, Invergowrie, Dundee, UK.
Astrobiology. 2015 May;15(5):400-11. doi: 10.1089/ast.2014.1229.
Earth will become uninhabitable within 2-3 Gyr as a result of the increasing luminosity of the Sun changing the boundaries of the habitable zone (HZ). Predictions about the future of habitable conditions on Earth include declining species diversity and habitat extent, ocean loss, and changes to geochemical cycles. Testing these predictions is difficult, but the discovery of a planet that is an analogue to future Earth could provide the means to test them. This planet would need to have an Earth-like biosphere history and to be approaching the inner edge of the HZ at present. Here, we assess the possibility of finding such a planet and discuss the benefits of analyzing older Earths. Finding an old-Earth analogue in nearby star systems would be ideal, because this would allow for atmospheric characterization. Hence, as an illustrative example, G stars within 10 pc of the Sun are assessed as potential old-Earth-analog hosts. Six of these represent good potential hosts. For each system, a hypothetical Earth analogue is placed at locations within the continuously habitable zone (CHZ) that would allow enough time for Earth-like biosphere development. Surface temperature evolution over the host star's main sequence lifetime (assessed by using a simple climate model) is used to determine whether the planet would be in the right stage of its late-habitable lifetime to exhibit detectable biosignatures. The best candidate, in terms of the chances of planet formation in the CHZ and of biosignature detection, is 61 Virginis. However, planet formation studies suggest that only a small fraction (0.36%) of G stars in the solar neighborhood could host an old-Earth analogue. If the development of Earth-like biospheres is rare, requiring a sequence of low-probability events to occur, biosphere evolution models suggest they are rarer still, with only thousands being present in the Galaxy as a whole.
由于太阳光度增加改变了宜居带(HZ)的边界,地球将在20亿至30亿年内变得不宜居住。关于地球未来宜居条件的预测包括物种多样性和栖息地范围下降、海洋消失以及地球化学循环的变化。检验这些预测很困难,但发现一颗与未来地球类似的行星可以提供检验它们的方法。这颗行星需要有类似地球的生物圈历史,并且目前正接近宜居带的内边缘。在这里,我们评估找到这样一颗行星的可能性,并讨论分析古老地球的益处。在附近恒星系统中找到一颗类似古老地球的行星将是理想的,因为这将允许对其大气进行特征描述。因此,作为一个示例,对距离太阳10秒差距内的G型恒星作为潜在的类似古老地球的宿主进行了评估。其中六颗具有很好的潜在宿主可能性。对于每个系统,将一颗假设的类似地球的行星放置在连续宜居带(CHZ)内的位置,这些位置将允许有足够的时间进行类似地球的生物圈发展。利用主序星寿命期间的表面温度演化(通过使用一个简单的气候模型进行评估)来确定该行星是否处于其晚期宜居寿命的正确阶段,以展现可检测到的生物特征。就行星在连续宜居带形成的可能性以及生物特征检测而言,最佳候选者是室女座61。然而,行星形成研究表明,在太阳附近只有一小部分(0.36%)的G型恒星能够拥有一颗类似古老地球的行星。如果类似地球的生物圈发展很罕见,需要一系列低概率事件发生,那么生物圈演化模型表明它们更为罕见,整个银河系中只有数千个这样的生物圈。