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      Exoplanet Biosignatures: Observational Prospects

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          Abstract

          We provide an overview of the prospects for biosignature detection and general characterization of temperate Earth-sized planets. We review planned space-based missions and ground-based projects as well as the basic methods they will employ, and summarize which exoplanet properties will become observable as these new facilities come on line. The observational strategies depend on whether the planets are transiting or not as well as on the spectral type of the host star. There is a reasonable expectation that the first constraints on spectroscopic features of atmospheres will be obtained before 2030. Successful initial characterization of a few nearby targets will be an important touchstone toward a more detailed scrutiny and/or a larger survey to address statistical questions such as the occurrence rate of habitable environments. The broad outlook which this paper presents may help develop a framework to evaluate the possibility of biospheres based on the observables, and consider new methodologies to characterize exoplanets of astrobiological interest.

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          Long-Term Variations of Daily Insolation and Quaternary Climatic Changes

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            Entrepreneurial Orientation and New Venture Performance: The Moderating Role of Intra- And Extraindustry Social Capital

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              Prevalence of Earth-size planets orbiting Sun-like stars

              Determining whether Earth-like planets are common or rare looms as a touchstone in the question of life in the universe. We searched for Earth-size planets that cross in front of their host stars by examining the brightness measurements of 42,000 stars from National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Kepler mission. We found 603 planets, including 10 that are Earth size (1-2 Earth-radii) and receive comparable levels of stellar energy to that of Earth (within a factor of four). We account for Kepler's imperfect detectability of such planets by injecting synthetic planet-caused dimmings into the Kepler brightness measurements and recording the fraction detected. We find that \(11\pm4%\) of Sun-like stars harbor an Earth-size planet receiving between one and four times the stellar intensity as Earth. We also find that the occurrence of Earth-size planets is constant with increasing orbital period (P), within equal intervals of logP up to \(\sim200\) d. Extrapolating, one finds \(5.7^{+1.7}_{-2.2}%\) of Sun-like stars harbor an Earth-size planet with orbital periods of 200-400 d.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                2017-05-19
                Article
                1705.07098
                f98b39f8-46ce-47ef-bc7b-47e66f18a64a

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                60 pages, 2 tables, 6 figures, part of a series of 5 review manuscripts of the NExSS Exoplanet Biosgnatures Workshop, open for community comment at https://nexss.info/groups/ebwww/
                astro-ph.EP

                Planetary astrophysics
                Planetary astrophysics

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