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Transport of ionizing radiation in terrestrial-like exoplanet atmospheres

Journal

ICARUS
Volume 171, Issue 1, Pages 229-253

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2004.04.009

Keywords

astrobiology; radiative transfer, scattering; photochemistry; extrasolar planets

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The propagation of ionizing radiation through model atmospheres of terrestrial-like exoplanets is studied for a large range of column densities and incident photon energies using a Monte Carlo code we have developed to treat Compton scattering and photoabsorption. Incident spectra from parent star flares, supernovae, and gamma-ray bursts are modeled and compared to energetic particles in importance. Large irradiation events with fluences of 10(6)-10(9) erg cm(-2) at the conventional habitable zone can occur at a rate from many per day (flares from young low-mass parent stars) to similar to100 per Gyr (supernovae and gamma-ray bursts). We find that terrestrial-like exoplanets with atmospheres thinner than about 100 g cm(-2) block nearly all X-rays, but transmit and reprocess a significant fraction of incident gamma-rays, producing a characteristic, flat surficial spectrum. Thick atmospheres ( 100 g cm(-2)) efficiently block even gamma-rays, but nearly all the incident energy is redistributed into diffuse UV and visible aurora-like emission, increasing the effective atmospheric transmission by many orders of magnitude. Depending on the presence of molecular UV absorbers and atmospheric thickness, up to 10% of the incident energy can reach the surface as UV reemission. For the Earth, between 2 x 10(-3) and 4 x 10(-2) of the incident flux reaches the ground in the biologically effective 200-320 nm range, depending on O-2/O-3 shielding. For atmospheres thicker than similar to50 g cm(-2) in the case of pure Rayleigh scattering and similar to100 g cm(-2) in the case Of O-2/O-3 absorption, the UV reemission exceeds the surficial transmitted ionizing radiation. We also discuss the effects of angle of incidence and derive a modified two-stream approximation solution for the UV transfer. Finally, we suggest that transient atmospheric ionization layers can be frequently created at altitudes lower than the equilibrium layers that result from steady irradiation and winds from the parent star. We suggest that these events can produce frequent fluctuations in atmospheric ionization levels and surficial UV fluxes on terrestrial-like planets. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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