Despite a fainter Sun, the surface of the early Earth was mostly ice-free.
Proposed solutions to this so-called "faint young Sun problem" have usually
involved higher amounts of greenhouse gases than present in the modern-day
atmosphere. However, geological evidence seemed to indicate that the
atmospheric CO2 concentrations during the Archaean and Proterozoic were far too
low to keep the surface from freezing. With a radiative-convective model
including new, updated thermal absorption coefficients, we found that the
amount of CO2 necessary to obtain 273 K at the surface is reduced up to an
order of magnitude compared to previous studies. For the late Archaean and
early Proterozoic period of the Earth, we calculate that CO2 partial pressures
of only about 2.9 mb are required to keep its surface from freezing which is
compatible with the amount inferred from sediment studies. This conclusion was
not significantly changed when we varied model parameters such as relative
humidity or surface albedo, obtaining CO2 partial pressures for the late
Archaean between 1.5 and 5.5 mb. Thus, the contradiction between sediment data
and model results disappears for the late Archaean and early Proterozoic.Comment: 53 pages, 4 tables, 11 figures, published in Planetary and Space
Scienc