4.7 Article

Chance played a role in determining whether Earth stayed habitable

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s43247-020-00057-8

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  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council through the Spitfire Doctoral Training Programme [NE/L002531/1]

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Earth's climate has remained continuously habitable throughout 3 or 4 billion years. This presents a puzzle (the 'habitability problem') because loss of habitability appears to have been more likely. Solar luminosity has increased by 30% over this time, which would, if not counteracted, have caused sterility. Furthermore, Earth's climate is precariously balanced, potentially able to deteriorate to deep-frozen conditions within as little as 1 million years. Here I present results from a novel simulation in which thousands of planets were assigned randomly generated climate feedbacks. Each planetary set-up was tested to see if it remained habitable over a period of 3 billion years. The conventional view attributes Earth's extended habitability solely to stabilising mechanisms. The simulation results shown here reveal instead that chance also plays a role in habitability outcomes. Earth's long-lasting habitability was therefore most likely a contingent rather than an inevitable outcome. Whether Earth remained habitable for over 3 billion years was probably determined by chance as well as by stabilising mechanisms, according to a simulation of thousands of planets each given randomly determined climate feedbacks

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