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  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>Cosmological and Astrobiological Review</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
      <issn pub-type="ppub">0000-0000</issn>
      <issn pub-type="epub">0000-0000</issn>
      <publisher>
        <publisher-name>SAPCRAA</publisher-name>
        <publisher-loc>Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina</publisher-loc>
      </publisher>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">1519</article-id>
      <article-id pub-id-type="doi">https://doi.org/10.65932/CAR-2024-1-2</article-id>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>Atmospheric biosignatures of exoplanets in the jwst era: the k2-18b case, dms detection methodology, and the ebdri detection-reliability framework</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name>
            <surname>Gomez</surname>
            <given-names>Larisa</given-names>
          </name>
          <contrib-id contrib-id-type="orcid">https://orcid.org/0009-0001-1576-9002</contrib-id>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <pub-date pub-type="epub">
        <day>30</day>
        <month>12</month>
        <year>2024</year>
      </pub-date>
      <volume>2</volume>
      <issue>1</issue>
      <fpage>21</fpage>
      <lpage>32</lpage>
      <self-uri xlink:href="https://www.sapcraa.com/article-preview/1519"/>
      <abstract>
        <p>The first 18 months of routine James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) science operations (July 2022–December 2023) generated the highest-quality exoplanet atmospheric spectra in the history of the field and, with them, the first JWST-era biosignature claims requiring formal evidentiary evaluation. The September 2023 Madhusudhan et al. report of methane (CH₄) at 5σ and carbon dioxide (CO₂) at 3σ in the atmosphere of the habitable-zone sub-Neptune K2- 18b, together with a tentative 1–2σ detection of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) — a molecule whose terrestrial atmospheric production is dominated by marine microbial activity — placed the Madhusudhan–Piette–Constantinou (2021) Hycean-world hypothesis at the centre of an emerging biosignature-evaluation debate (Madhusudhan et al., 2023, 2021). The K2-18b case is, on the 2023 evidence, the first JWST-era exoplanet for which a biosignature claim has been formally articulated in the peer-reviewed literature, but not the only relevant result: the WASP39b Early Release Science programme delivered four parallel Nature papers establishing the JWST atmospheric-characterisation methodology, including the first detection of photochemically produced SO₂ in an exoplanet atmosphere (Ahrer et al., 2023; Rustamkulov et al., 2023; Alderson et al., 2023; Feinstein et al., 2023; Tsai et al., 2023), while the TRAPPIST-1 characterisation (Greene et al., 2023; Zieba et al., 2023; Lim et al., 2023) constrained rocky-planet atmospheric retention around late-type M-dwarf stars. The Schwieterman et al. (2018), Catling et al. (2018), Meadows et al. (2018), and Krissansen-Totton et al. (2016) frameworks together provide the methodological infrastructure for evaluating these claims. The original contribution of this article is the Exoplanet Biosignature Detection Reliability Index (EBDRI), a normalised composite metric bounded on [0,1] that integrates five dimensions — spectroscopic signal-tonoise robustness, multi-instrument cross-validation, abiotic mimicry exclusion, atmospheric photochemistry consistency, and independent-team replication — and returns a quantitative reliability ranking of JWST-era biosignature claims. Applied to the 2023 dataset, EBDRI returns moderate values for the K2-18b CH₄ and CO₂ detections (≈0.55–0.60, “strong detection” tier), a low–moderate value for the K2-18b DMS tentative detection (≈0.30, “contested” tier), a high value for the WASP-39b CO₂ detection (≈0.75, “robust detection” tier), and low values for currently claimed TRAPPIST-1 biosignature features (uniformly &lt; 0.30).</p>
      </abstract>
      <kwd-group kwd-group-type="author">
        <kwd>exoplanet biosignatures</kwd>
        <kwd>K2-18b</kwd>
        <kwd>dimethyl sulfide</kwd>
        <kwd>Hycean world</kwd>
        <kwd>JWST transit spectroscopy</kwd>
        <kwd>atmospheric characterization</kwd>
        <kwd>WASP-39b</kwd>
        <kwd>TRAPPIST-1</kwd>
        <kwd>sub-Neptune</kwd>
        <kwd>false-positive biosignatures</kwd>
      </kwd-group>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
</article>
