The Case for a Gaian Bottleneck: The Biology of Habitability

Date

2016-01

Authors

Chopra, Aditya
Lineweaver, Charles

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Mary Ann Liebert

Abstract

The prerequisites and ingredients for life seem to be abundantly available in the Universe. However, the Universe does not seem to be teeming with life. The most common explanation for this is a low probability for the emergence of life (an emergence bottleneck), notionally due to the intricacies of the molecular recipe. Here, we present an alternative Gaian bottleneck explanation: If life emerges on a planet, it only rarely evolves quickly enough to regulate greenhouse gases and albedo, thereby maintaining surface temperatures compatible with liquid water and habitability. Such a Gaian bottleneck suggests that (i) extinction is the cosmic default for most life that has ever emerged on the surfaces of wet rocky planets in the Universe and (ii) rocky planets need to be inhabited to remain habitable. In the Gaian bottleneck model, the maintenance of planetary habitability is a property more associated with an unusually rapid evolution of biological regulation of surface volatiles than with the luminosity and distance to the host star.

Description

Keywords

carbonates, extinction, biological, models, theoretical, silicates, time factors, water, exobiology, extraterrestrial environment, planets

Citation

Source

Astrobiology

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

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