Literature DB >> 11543507

Influence of carbon dioxide clouds on early martian climate.

M A Mischna1, J F Kasting, A Pavlov, R Freedman.   

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that clouds made of carbon dioxide ice may have warmed the surface of early Mars by reflecting not only incoming solar radiation but upwelling IR radiation as well. However, these studies have not treated scattering self-consistently in the thermal IR. Our own calculations, which treat IR scattering properly, confirm these earlier calculations but show that CO2 clouds can also cool the surface, especially if they are low and optically thick. Estimating the actual effect of CO2 clouds on early martian climate will require three-dimensional models in which cloud location, height, and optical depth, as well as surface temperature and pressure, are determined self-consistently. Our calculations further confirm that CO2 clouds should extend the outer boundary of the habitable zone around a star but that there is still a finite limit beyond which above-freezing surface temperatures cannot be maintained by a CO2-H2O atmosphere. For our own Solar System, the absolute outer edge of the habitable zone is at approximately 2.4 AU.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11543507     DOI: 10.1006/icar.2000.6380

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Icarus        ISSN: 0019-1035            Impact factor:   3.508


  6 in total

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4.  Star Masses and Star-Planet Distances for Earth-like Habitability.

Authors:  David Waltham
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5.  A scientometric prediction of the discovery of the first potentially habitable planet with a mass similar to Earth.

Authors:  Samuel Arbesman; Gregory Laughlin
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6.  Remote life-detection criteria, habitable zone boundaries, and the frequency of Earth-like planets around M and late K stars.

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  6 in total

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