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Paper: Chemical Habitability: Supply and Retention of Life's Essential Elements During Planet Formation
Monograph: 9, Protostars and Planets VII
Page: 1031
Authors: Krijt, S.; Kama, M.; McClure, M.; Teske, J.; Bergin, E. A.; Shorttle, O.; Walsh, K. J.; Raymond, S. N.
Abstract: Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus and Sulfur (CHNOPS) play key roles in the origin and proliferation of life on Earth. Given the universality of physics and chemistry, not least the ubiquity of water as a solvent and carbon as a backbone of complex molecules, CHNOPS are likely crucial to most habitable worlds. To help guide and inform the search for potentially habitable and ultimately inhabited environments, we begin by summarizing the CHNOPS budget of various reservoirs on Earth, their role in shaping our biosphere, and their origins in the Solar Nebula. We then synthesize our current understanding of how these elements behave and are distributed in diverse astrophysical settings, tracing their journeys from synthesis in dying stars to molecular clouds, protoplanetary settings, and ultimately temperate rocky planets around main sequence stars. We end by identifying key branching points during this journey, highlighting instances where a forming planet's distribution of CHNOPS can be altered dramatically, and speculating about the consequences for the chemical habitability of these worlds.
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