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  5. The ultraviolet habitable zone of exoplanets
 

The ultraviolet habitable zone of exoplanets

Journal
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY  
Date Issued
2023
Author(s)
SPINELLI, Riccardo  
•
BORSA, Francesco  
•
GHIRLANDA, Giancarlo  
•
GHISELLINI, Gabriele  
•
HAARDT, FRANCESCO  
DOI
10.1093/mnras/stad928
Abstract
The dozens of rocky exoplanets discovered in the circumstellar habitable zone (CHZ) currently represent the most suitable places to host life as we know it outside the Solar system. However, the presumed presence of liquid water on the CHZ planets does not guarantee suitable environments for the emergence of life. According to experimental studies, the building blocks of life are most likely produced photochemically in presence of a minimum ultraviolet (UV) flux. On the other hand, high UV flux can be life-threatening, leading to atmospheric erosion and damaging biomolecules essential to life. These arguments raise questions about the actual habitability of CHZ planets around stars other than Solar-type ones, with different UV to bolometric luminosity ratios. By combining the 'principle of mediocrity' and recent experimental studies, we define UV boundary conditions (UV-habitable zone, UHZ) within which life can possibly emerge and evolve. We investigate whether exoplanets discovered in CHZs do indeed experience such conditions. By analysing Swift-UV/Optical Telescope data, we measure the near ultraviolet (NUV) luminosities of 17 stars harbouring 23 planets in their CHZ. We derive an empirical relation between NUV luminosity and stellar effective temperature. We find that 18 of the CHZ exoplanets actually orbit outside the UHZ, i.e. the NUV luminosity of their M-dwarf hosts is decisively too low to trigger abiogenesis - through cyanosulfidic chemistry - on them. Only stars with effective temperature ≳3900 K illuminate their CHZ planets with enough NUV radiation to trigger abiogenesis. Alternatively, colder stars would require a high-energy flaring activity....
Volume
522
Issue
1
Start page
1411
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/36974
Url
https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/522/1/1411/7100980
http://arxiv.org/abs/2303.16229v1
Issn Identifier
0035-8711
Rights
open.access
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