AI Article Synopsis

  • The article discusses the environmental conditions necessary for aerobe organisms to thrive, focusing on the atmospheric limits for biological life forms.
  • It defines Earth-like habitats as rocky exoplanets within the habitable zone that have nitrogen-oxygen-dominated atmospheres with minimal carbon dioxide, where complex life could potentially evolve.
  • The authors present a new formula to estimate the occurrence rate of these Earth-like habitats in the Galaxy, emphasizing that future astronomical observations will enhance our understanding of exoplanet atmospheres.

Article Abstract

In this hypothesis article, we discuss the basic requirements of planetary environments where aerobe organisms can grow and survive, including atmospheric limitations of millimeter-to-meter-sized biological animal life based on physical limits and O, N, and CO toxicity levels. By assuming that animal-like extraterrestrial organisms adhere to similar limits, we define Earth-like habitats (EH) as rocky exoplanets in the habitable zone for complex life that host N-O-dominated atmospheres with minor amounts of CO, at which advanced animal-like life or potentially even extraterrestrial intelligent life can in principle evolve and exist. We then derive a new formula that can be used to estimate the maximum occurrence rate of such Earth-like habitats in the Galaxy. This contains realistic probabilistic arguments that can be fine-tuned and constrained by atmospheric characterization with future space and ground-based telescopes. As an example, we briefly discuss two specific requirements feeding into our new formula that, although not quantifiable at present, will become scientifically quantifiable in the upcoming decades due to future observations of exoplanets and their atmospheres. Key Words: Eta-Earth-Earth-like habitats-oxygenation time-nitrogen atmospheres-carbon dioxide-animal-like life. Astrobiology 24, 897-915.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2023.0075DOI Listing

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