Scientists Predict Exact Date Life On Earth Will End: Study

Quick Reads
Summary is AI generated, newsroom reviewed.
The study utilized NASA planetary modeling and ran 400,000 simulations.
As the sun ages, rising temperatures will disrupt Earth’s climate and ecosystem.
Oxygen production will cease as water evaporates and the carbon cycle weakens.
A supercomputer simulation by researchers at Toho University, using NASA planetary modelling, predicts that Earth’s oxygen will disappear in approximately one billion years, making survival impossible. The study explored the likely evolution of Earth’s atmosphere, running 400,000 simulations.
As the sun ages, it will become hotter and brighter, affecting Earth’s climate. Water will evaporate, surface temperatures will rise, and the carbon cycle will weaken, killing plants and halting oxygen production. The atmosphere will revert to a state of high methane, reminiscent of early Earth before the Great Oxidation Event.
The study, published in Nature Geoscience, titled ‘The future lifespan of Earth’s oxygenated atmosphere’, found the future lifespan of Earth’s oxygen-rich atmosphere is 1 billion years.
“For many years, the lifespan of Earth’s biosphere has been discussed based on scientific knowledge about the steady brightening of the Sun and global carbonate-silicate geochemical cycle,” Kazumi Ozaki, Assistant Professor at Toho University, said in a news release.
“One of the corollaries of such a theoretical framework is a continuous decline in atmospheric CO2 levels and global warming on geological timescales.”
“It’s generally thought Earth’s biosphere will come to an end in 2 billion years due to the combination of overheating and CO2 scarcity for photosynthesis.”
“If true, one can expect atmospheric O2 levels will also eventually decrease in the distant future. However, it remains unclear exactly when and how this will occur.”
While life could theoretically exist in such an atmosphere, it would be drastically different from what we know. Kazumi Ozaki noted that previous estimates suggested Earth’s biosphere would end in two billion years due to overheating and CO2 scarcity. This new research narrows that timeframe, predicting rapid deoxygenation in one billion years.