http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2013/mar/25/earth-is-closer-to-the-edge-of-suns-habitable-zone

Earth is closer to the edge of Sun's habitable zone - physicsworld.com

The Earth could be closer than previously thought to the inner edge of the
Sun's habitable zone, according to a new study by planetary scientists in
the US and France. The research also suggests that if our planet moved out
of the habitable zone, it could lead to a "moist greenhouse" climate that
could kick-start further drastic changes to the atmosphere.A star's
habitable zone is the set of orbits within which a planet could have liquid
water on its surface – and being within this zone is considered to be an
important prerequisite for the development of life.The current consensus is
that the Sun's habitable zone begins at about 0.95 astronomical units (AU),
a comfortable distance from the Earth's orbit at 1 AU. However, this latest
work by James Kasting and colleagues at Penn State University, NASA and the
University of Bordeaux suggests that that inner edge of the zone is much
further out at 0.99 AU.

Lost oceans

"Our new climate model predicts that we are closer to the moist-greenhouse
scenario than we had thought," says Kasting. In this scenario, the
stratosphere becomes wet and fully saturated as the Earth's surface warms.
This results in the dissociation of water molecules and the release of
hydrogen into space. Depending on the levels of atmospheric saturation, the
oceans would be completely lost over timescales as long as several billion
years. This, say the scientists, would result in our climate changing to
resemble a Venus-styled runaway greenhouse.Penn State's Ramses Ramirez
points out that the atmosphere currently has an average surface relative
humidity of 77%, which gradually decreases to 10% or less above an altitude
of 10 km – so the atmosphere is far from fully saturated. However, there
are two ways that the Earth's atmosphere could move in that direction.

Slipping over the edge

One is that the Earth's orbit changes and it slips across the 0.99 AU inner
edge. The second is that the Earth remains at 1 AU but rising temperatures
caused by greenhouse gases such as water vapour and carbon dioxide lead to
a moist greenhouse. Indeed, the researchers are now calculating how much
carbon dioxide would be needed for the second scenario to occur.Scientists
believe that a moist greenhouse would begin when the global average
temperature reaches 340 K – whereas the current average is 288 K. Kasting
says that under really pessimistic assumptions – a 10-fold to 20-fold
increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide – it could be possible for the
average temperature to reach 340 K. However, he points out that even if
humans continue to burn fossil fuels at a very high rate, a catastrophic
moist greenhouse would not kick in until at least 2300.Other researchers,
however, point out that the Earth has been much hotter in the past and such
a transition did not occur. Dorian Abbot, a climate scientist at the
University of Chicago, points out that average temperatures were about
10–15 K warmer during the Cretaceous period. "As far as we know, Earth has
never been in a moist-greenhouse state," says Abbot. "We certainly did not
lose our entire oceans."

Signatures of moist greenhouse by 2100?

Ravi Kopparapu at Penn State says that if current IPCC temperature
projections of a 4 K increase by the end of this century are correct –
which assumes a rapidly growing and fossil-fuel intensive global economy –
our descendants could start seeing the signatures of a moist greenhouse by
2100.Kopparapu argues that once the atmosphere makes the transition to a
moist greenhouse, the only option would be global geoengineering to reverse
the process. In such a moist-greenhouse scenario, not only are the ozone
layers and ice caps destroyed, but the oceans would begin evaporating into
the atmosphere's upper stratosphere.Ramirez admits that there are two major
caveats associated with the work. The first is the assumption that the
modelled atmospheres are already fully saturated. This means that the
atmosphere holds as much water vapour as it possibly can at a given
temperature. The second is that the models do not incorporate cloud
feedback, which could be important.

"Sobering" results

Despite these caveats, Kasting still thinks that the results are sobering.
"If you are this close to [the] inner edge of the habitable zone, it is not
as difficult to push yourself over...[and] that is catastrophic," he
says.However, Colin Goldblatt, a planetary scientist at the University of
Victoria in Canada, cautions against taking the concept of a habitable zone
too literally. "I can put a planet at 0.9 AU and that planet will be
perfectly habitable," says Goldblatt. "It might not be where Kasting would
like to retire, but things will live there."The research is described
in The Astrophysical Journal.

About the author

Bruce Dorminey is a US-based science journalist and author of Distant
Wanderers: the Search for Planets Beyond the Solar System

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