Assessing planetary habitability. Giovanni Vladilo INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Trieste

Similar documents
Complexity of the climate system: the problem of the time scales. Climate models and planetary habitability

PTYS 214 Spring Announcements. Midterm 3 next Thursday!

Lecture 2 Global and Zonal-mean Energy Balance

Lecture 3: Global Energy Cycle

Exobiology and Planetary Habitability. Giovanni Vladilo INAF-OATs

Introduction The Role of Astronomy p. 3 Astronomical Objects of Research p. 4 The Scale of the Universe p. 7 Spherical Astronomy Spherical

Lecture 2: Light And Air

Schmidt-Kennicutt relations in SPH simulations of disc galaxies with effective SN thermal feedback

Fundamental Astronomy

Radiative Balance and the Faint Young Sun Paradox

Today. Events. Terrestrial Planet Atmospheres (continued) Homework DUE. Review next time? Exam next week

GLOBAL CLIMATE MODELS AND EXTREME HABITABILITY

Hunting Habitable Shadows. Elizabeth Tasker

Chapter 10 Planetary Atmospheres Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds

Grades 9-12: Earth Sciences

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph.ep] 28 Apr 2015

Chapter 10 Planetary Atmospheres Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds

Chapter 10 Planetary Atmospheres: Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds. What is an atmosphere? About 10 km thick

Planetary Atmospheres (Chapter 10)

Lecture 4: Global Energy Balance

Lecture 4: Global Energy Balance. Global Energy Balance. Solar Flux and Flux Density. Blackbody Radiation Layer Model.

PRE-LAB FOR PLANETARY ATMOSPHERES

The Earth s Hydrosphere. The volatile component of rocky planets (hydrospheres and atmospheres) Earth water reservoirs Rollins (2007)

Chapter 10 Planetary Atmospheres: Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds. What is an atmosphere? Earth s Atmosphere. Atmospheric Pressure

Chapter 10 Planetary Atmospheres: Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds

Charles Keeton. Principles of Astrophysics. Using Gravity and Stellar Physics. to Explore the Cosmos. ^ Springer

Science Olympiad Astronomy C Division Event National Exam

Habitable Planets. Much of it stolen from. Yutaka ABE University of Tokyo

Life in the Universe (1)

PLANETARY ATMOSPHERES

Science of extrasolar Planets A focused update

In-Class Question 1) Do you think that there are planets outside the solar which would be habitable for human life?

Radiation from planets

1. Weather and climate.

Importance of the study of extrasolar planets. Exoplanets Introduction. Importance of the study of extrasolar planets

13 - EXTRASOLAR PLANETS

Habitability. Habitability criteria. Habitability of the Earth The Earth is the only reference that we have to test the concept of habitability

The Cosmic Perspective Planetary Atmospheres: Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds

ASTR 380 The Drake Equation

Climate Dynamics Simple Climate Models

Young Solar-like Systems

Greenhouse Effect & Habitable Zones Lab # 7

The Earth s Hydrosphere. The volatile component of rocky planets (hydrospheres and atmospheres) Earth water reservoirs Rollins (2007)

Earth Systems Science Chapter 3

About the Midterm. Same rules. About the same length/structure Objects in the Solar System through Stars & Galaxy Classification. Use your index card!

Electromagnetic Radiation.

Galactic environment The possibility of Galactic Paleoclimatology. Jun Makino with Takayuki Saito, Junichi Baba ELSI

[25] Exoplanet Characterization (11/30/17)

Chapter 10 Planetary Atmospheres Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds. What is an atmosphere? Planetary Atmospheres

Helmut Lammer Austrian Academy of Sciences, Space Research Institute Schmiedlstr. 6, A-8042 Graz, Austria (

Synergies between E-ELT and space instrumentation for extrasolar planet science

Electromagnetic Radiation. Radiation and the Planetary Energy Balance. Electromagnetic Spectrum of the Sun

Radiation in climate models.

Chapter 12 Long-Term Climate Regulation

ASTR 380 The Drake Equation

Lecture 3. Background materials. Planetary radiative equilibrium TOA outgoing radiation = TOA incoming radiation Figure 3.1

29:50 Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe Final Exam December 13, 2010 Form A

Planetary Atmospheres

Astronomy. Catherine Turon. for the Astronomy Working Group

Climate Regulation. - What stabilizes the climate - Greenhouse effect

25.2 Stellar Evolution. By studying stars of different ages, astronomers have been able to piece together the evolution of a star.

Lecture 2: Global Energy Cycle

Solar Flux and Flux Density. Lecture 2: Global Energy Cycle. Solar Energy Incident On the Earth. Solar Flux Density Reaching Earth

Astronomy. physics.wm.edu/~hancock/171/ A. Dayle Hancock. Small 239. Office hours: MTWR 10-11am

Astronomy 1504 Section 10 Final Exam Version 1 May 6, 1999

n p = n e for stars like Sun f s = fraction of stars with suitable properties

Electromagnetic Radiation.

Lecture Outlines. Chapter 15. Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan Pearson Education, Inc.

Searching for Other Worlds

Anthropomorphic (formed for man)

PTYS 214 Spring Announcements. Get exam from Kyle!

Lecture 2: Global Energy Cycle

17 March Good luck!

Probing the Galactic Planetary Census

LESSON TITLE Earth 2.0. Guiding Question: Why should we continue to explore? Ignite Curiosity

Other migration processes. New transiting hot Jupiters from last week. First success from CoRoT. Kozai mechanism

Foundations of Astrophysics

ATMOS 5140 Lecture 1 Chapter 1

Characterization of the exoplanet host stars. Exoplanets Properties of the host stars. Characterization of the exoplanet host stars

AST 105 Intro Astronomy The Solar System

Fusion in first few minutes after Big Bang form lightest elements

Lecture 6. Solar vs. terrestrial radiation and the bare rock climate model.

The current climate epoch: The Holocene

Astronomy 102: Stars and Galaxies Examination 3 April 11, 2003

Dynamics of Energy Balance Models for Planetary Climate

Temperature Scales

Extrasolar Planets: Ushering in the Era of Comparative Exoplanetology

2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Module 4: Astronomy The Solar System Topic 3 Content: The Terrestrial Planets Notes Introduction

Astronomy Today. Eighth edition. Eric Chaisson Steve McMillan

The Cosmic Perspective Planetary Atmospheres: Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds

HEATING THE ATMOSPHERE

Object Type Moons Rings Planet Terrestrial none none. Max Distance from Sun. Min Distance from Sun. Avg. Distance from Sun 57,910,000 km 0.

The Ice Age sequence in the Quaternary

Astronomy 122 Midterm

Detection of Earth-like planets

The Universe and Galaxies. Adapted from:

P607 Climate and Energy (Dr. H. Coe)

Lecture 9: Climate Sensitivity and Feedback Mechanisms

Fusion in first few minutes after Big Bang form lightest elements

Transcription:

Assessing planetary habitability Giovanni Vladilo INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Trieste

Personal background interstellar dust: abundance and chemical evolution

Recent interest habitability of different types of astrophysical environments Present talk focussed on Planetary habitability... not enough time to present Galactic habitability

Assessing the habitability of terrestrial planets by means of Energy Balance Models Gaia Ferri (1,2), Giuseppe Murante (3), Antonello Provenzale (4), Laura Silva (1), Giovanni Vladilo (1,2) (1) INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Trieste, (2) University of Trieste, Department of Physics, (3) INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Torino, (4) Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate (ISAC)-CNR, Torino

Goals Estimate the mean surface temperature of the planet, T Use T as an estimator of habitability

Planetary Energy Balance OUTGOING RADIATION Long wavelength INCOMING RADIATION Short wavelength S: stellar radiation A: planetary albedo

One-dimensional Energy Balance Models OUTGOING RADIATION INCOMING RADIATION HORIZONTAL TRANSPORT Use Ti(t) as an estimator of habitability

OUTGOING RADIATION INCOMING RADIATION Temporal evolution Diffusion coefficient In spite of its simplicity the model can capture some important planetary feedbacks

Why Energy Balance Models? Energy Balance Models vs Global Circulation Models Fast simulations Moderate number of parameters Schematic geography Extremely time-consuming Huge number of input parameters Detailed knowledge of geography

Why Energy Balance Models? Fast simulations Moderate number of parameters Schematic geography Energy Balance Models vs Global Circulation Models Ideal when experimental data are scarce Extremely time-consuming Huge number of input parameters Detailed knowledge of geography

Energy Balance Models ideal for estimating planetary habitability Habitability outside the Solar System Extrasolar planets Habitability in the Solar System Primitive Earth Primitive Mars

Main model parameters Astronomical Stellar flux Orbital parameters (a, e...) Planetary Rotational period Axis inclination Ocean fraction Atmospheric parameters Heat capacity Heat diffusion...

Main model parameters Astronomical Relatively good observational constraints, even for exoplanets Planetary Very few observational constraints Stellar flux Orbital parameters (a, e...) Rotational period Axis inclination Ocean fraction Atmospheric parameters Heat capacity Heat diffusion...

The Energy Balance Model code Validation Based on the detailed comparison with previous results (Spiegel et al. 2008) New implementations Elliptical planetary orbits (most previous codes assume circular orbits) Detailed treatment of planetary albedo Recepy for outgoing IR flux proposed by Williams & Kasting (1997)

Tuning of the model parameters Comparison with experimental data of terrestrial planets Earth, Mars Diagnostic tools Temperature - latitude profiles Albedo - latitude profiles...

Mean annual temperature versus latitude Data: NASA Mars-GRAM (Global Reference Atmospheric Model) 2010 Model: black-body outgo + albedo from Mars GRAM Mars linea continua: Modello EBM di Marte croci: Misure medie annuali Marte

Mean annual temperature versus latitude Data: ERA Interim 2m temperature profiles average 1979-2010 Validation of a model presented by Spiegel et al. (2008) Earth

Mean seasonal temperature versus latitude Data: ERA Interim 2m temperature profiles average 1979-2010 Validation of a model presented by Spiegel et al. (2008) Earth

Liquid water criterion Quantifying habitability

Fractional habitability Mean annual habitability at a given latitude Mean global habitability at a given time Mean global annual habitability

map obtained from 210 simulations Map of fractional habitability in the plane (a,e) for Earth-like planets Based on the Earth-like model presented by Spiegel et al. (2008) fhab Explanation of the trend

Map of fractional habitability in the plane (a,e) for Earth-like planets Based on the Earth-like model presented by Spiegel et al. (2008) fhab The Earth lies at the edge of the fractional habitability map

Map of fractional habitability in the plane (a,e) for Earth-like planets Based on the Earth-like model presented by Spiegel et al. (2008) Venus is close to the hot edge of the fractional habitability map fhab Mars is far away from the cold edge of the fractional habitability map

Map of fractional habitability in the plane (a,e) for generic terrestrial planets Based on the Earth-like model presented by Spiegel et al. (2008) Exoplanets can be plotted on this map, or similar ones, to assess their fractional habitability fhab Maps for generic exoplanets can be produced by varying the stellar & planet parameters

Habitability maps: the ocean fraction as a free parameter

Terrestrial planet with ocean fraction = 0.7 fhab

Terrestrial planet with ocean fraction = 0.3 fhab

Terrestrial planet with ocean fraction = 0.0 fhab

Mean temperature and CO2 pressure on the Earth at the epoch of the origin of life

Habitability of the Earth at the epoch of the origin of life In the primitive Earth the solar flux was ~70% of the present value. Modelling the Earth climate with this faint solar flux yields a frozen planet Since liquid water was present, it is commonly assumed that the primitive greenhouse effect was stronger By using Energy Balance Models we are able to estimate the minimum partial pressure of CO2 necessary to make the early Earth habitable

Habitability of the Earth at the epoch of the origin of life We built up a simple model representative of the primitive Earth and gradually rised p(co2) starting from the present atmospheric level (3 x 10-4 bar) Preliminary results obtained from an updated EBM originally introduced by Williams & Kasting (1997)

Habitability of the Earth at the epoch of the origin of life Solar flux = 0.70 present value Fraction of oceans=0.95 Total atmospheric pressure=1 bar Partial pressure of CO2 = 0.1 bar Rotation period: 24 h Rotation period: 8 h T (K) Preliminary results obtained from an updated EBM originally introduced by Williams & Kasting (1997)

Habitability of the Earth at the epoch of the origin of life Solar flux = 0.70 present value Fraction of oceans=0.95 Total atmospheric pressure=1 bar Partial pressure of CO2 = 0.3 bar Rotation period: 24 h Rotation period: 8 h T (K) Preliminary results obtained from an updated EBM originally introduced by Williams & Kasting (1997)

Habitability of the Earth at the epoch of the origin of life Solar flux = 0.70 present value Fraction of oceans=0.95 Total atmospheric pressure=1 bar Partial pressure of CO2 = 0.9 bar Rotation period: 24 h Rotation period: 8 h T (K) Preliminary results obtained from an updated EBM originally introduced by Williams & Kasting (1997)

Conclusions Energy Balance Models provide a simple tool for investigating the habitability of terrestrial planets Can be employed to cast light on the properties of the Earth at the epoch of the origin of life There is room for including more realistic climate recepies while keeping low the computing time In order to improve the definition of habitability...

... we would like: biologists to give us a set of limits Tmin, Tmax & Pmin, Pmax for life to exist...... and climatologists to give us a <Tmax> to avoid runaway grenhouse effect Pmax from biology??? Climatological <Tmax>: runaway greenhouse effect

Experimental data for exoplanets by combining different techniques (RV & transit) orbital parameters (a, e) mass, radius & mean density

Galactic habitability Galaxy simulations as a tool for mapping habitable zones Pierluigi Monaco (2), Giuseppe Murante (3), Luca Tornatore (2), Giovanni Vladilo (1,2) (1) INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Trieste, (2) University of Trieste, Department of Physics (3) INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Torino

basic idea Galactic Habitable Zone Gonzales et al. (2001) planet formation probability Metallicity level planet sterilization probability Rate of supernova explosions In particular regions of the Galaxy the combined probability is optimal for habitability

Cosmological SPH N-body simulations Milky Way-like galaxies evolutionary maps of properties relevant for habitability Metallicity level planet formation probability Rate of supernova explosions planet sterilization probability

Cosmological SPH N-body simulations Milky Way-like galaxies evolutionary maps of properties relevant for habitability Metallicity level planet formation probability Rate of supernova explosions please contact me if you are interested planet sterilization probability

Example of planetary feedback induced by a change of rotational velocity period: 24 h period: 8 h Example: validation of an Earth-like model presented by Spiegel et al. (2008)