Abstract The abundances of atmospheric carbon species—carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), carbon monoxide (CO), and methane (CH 4 )—exert fundamental controls on the climate, redox state, and prebiotic environment of terrestrial planets. As exoplanet atmospheric characterization advances, it is essential to understand how these species are regulated on habitable terrestrial planets across a wide range of stellar and planetary conditions. Here, we develop an integrated numerical model that couples atmospheric chemistry, climate, and the long-term carbon cycle to investigate the atmospheric compositions of lifeless, Earth-like planets orbiting Sun-like (F-, G-, and K-type) stars. Our simulations demonstrate that CO 2 , CO, and CH 4 generally increase with orbital distance, and that planets near the outer edge of the habitable zone may undergo CO runaway—a photochemical instability driven by severe depletion of OH radicals. The threshold for CO runaway depends strongly on stellar spectral type and is most easily triggered around cooler, lower-mass stars. In contrast, the atmospheric production of formaldehyde (H 2 CO)—a key precursor for prebiotic organic chemistry—peaks around planets orbiting more massive, UV-luminous stars and is maximized at orbital distances interior to the CO-runaway threshold. These results establish a quantitative framework linking observable system properties—stellar type and orbital distance—and the atmospheric carbon chemistry of lifeless Earth-like planets, providing new context for interpreting future spectroscopic observations and for evaluating the potential of such planets to sustain prebiotic chemistry.
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Yoshiaki Endo
Shanghai Institute for Science of Science
Yasuto Watanabe
National Institute for Environmental Studies
Kazumi Ozaki
Shanghai Institute for Science of Science
The Astrophysical Journal
National Institute for Environmental Studies
Shanghai Institute for Science of Science
Institute of Science Tokyo
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Endo et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a13e60e0e02ee3982d313f3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ae6266