2017ApJ...843..110R


Query : 2017ApJ...843..110R

2017ApJ...843..110R - Astrophys. J., 843, 110-110 (2017/July-2)

The surface UV environment on planets orbiting M dwarfs: implications for prebiotic chemistry and the need for experimental follow-up.

RANJAN S., WORDSWORTH R. and SASSELOV D.D.

Abstract (from CDS):

Potentially habitable planets orbiting M dwarfs are of intense astrobiological interest because they are the only rocky worlds accessible to biosignature search over the next 10+ years because of a confluence of observational effects. Simultaneously, recent experimental and theoretical work suggests that UV light may have played a key role in the origin of life on Earth, especially the origin of RNA. Characterizing the UV environment on M-dwarf planets is important for understanding whether life as we know it could emerge on such worlds. In this work, we couple radiative transfer models to observed M-dwarf spectra to determine the UV environment on prebiotic Earth-analog planets orbiting M dwarfs. We calculate dose rates to quantify the impact of different host stars on prebiotically important photoprocesses. We find that M-dwarf planets have access to 100-1000 times less bioactive UV fluence than the young Earth. It is unclear whether UV-sensitive prebiotic chemistry that may have been important to abiogenesis, such as the only known prebiotically plausible pathways for pyrimidine ribonucleotide synthesis, could function on M-dwarf planets. This uncertainty affects objects like the recently discovered habitable-zone planets orbiting Proxima Centauri, TRAPPIST-1, and LHS 1140. Laboratory studies of the sensitivity of putative prebiotic pathways to irradiation level are required to resolve this uncertainty. If steady-state M-dwarf UV output is insufficient to power these pathways, transient elevated UV irradiation due to flares may suffice; laboratory studies can constrain this possibility as well.

Abstract Copyright: © 2017. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): astrobiology - methods: numerical - planet-star interactions - planets and satellites: atmospheres - stars: flare - stars: low-mass - stars: low-mass

Simbad objects: 14

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Number of rows : 14
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NAME G 268-38b Pl 00 44 59.3309137511 -15 16 17.542839990           ~ 180 0
2 G 268-38 PM* 00 44 59.3309137511 -15 16 17.542839990     14.150 13.801   M4.5V 141 0
3 HD 285968 PM* 04 42 55.7750207949 +18 57 29.395947044 12.668 11.49 9.951 8.931 7.702 M2.5V 335 2
4 V* AD Leo Er* 10 19 36.2808181226 +19 52 12.010446571   10.82 9.52 9.19   dM3 1340 1
5 Ross 905 PM* 11 42 11.0933350978 +26 42 23.650782778   12.06 10.613 10.272 8.24 M3V 645 1
6 NAME Proxima Centauri Er* 14 29 42.9461331854 -62 40 46.164680672 14.21 12.95 11.13 9.45 7.41 M5.5Ve 1299 0
7 NAME Proxima Centauri b Pl 14 29 42.9461331854 -62 40 46.164680672           ~ 368 0
8 BD-07 4003 BY* 15 19 26.8269387505 -07 43 20.189497466 13.403 11.76 10.560 9.461 8.911 M3V 641 2
9 G 139-21 PM* 17 15 18.9339850845 +04 57 50.066612336       14.394   M4.5V 325 1
10 HD 156384C PM* 17 18 58.8272997802 -34 59 48.612673382 12.96 11.79 10.22 10.05 8.82 M1.5V 221 1
11 G 208-42 Er* 19 51 09.3205973189 +46 29 00.213809780   14.47   12.544   M4.0Ve 189 0
12 HD 204961 PM* 21 33 33.9751191976 -49 00 32.399427028 11.359 10.176 8.672 7.665 6.479 M2/3V 290 1
13 BD-15 6290 BY* 22 53 16.7325836486 -14 15 49.304052185 12.928 11.749 10.192 9.013 7.462 M3.5V 1013 1
14 TRAPPIST-1 LM* 23 06 29.3684948589 -05 02 29.037301866     18.798 16.466 14.024 M7.5e 995 0

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