Mass-radius relationships for exoplanets
Damian Swift, Jon Eggert, Damien Hicks, Sebastien Hamel, Kyle, Caspersen, Eric Schwegler, Gilbert Collins, Nadine Nettelmann, and Graeme, Ackland

TL;DR
This paper develops a method to derive and test equations of state for planetary materials, enabling improved interpretation of exoplanet mass-radius data and insights into their composition and internal structure.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic approach for deriving and testing equations of state, and applies it to interpret observed exoplanet mass-radius relationships.
Findings
Variations in equations of state significantly affect predicted mass-radius relations.
Kepler-10b likely has a larger core than Earth, about 2/3 of its mass.
GJ 1214b's position suggests an icy composition with a large core or high water content.
Abstract
For planets other than Earth, interpretation of the composition and structure depends largely on comparing the mass and radius with the composition expected given their distance from the parent star. The composition implies a mass-radius relation which relies heavily on equations of state calculated from electronic structure theory and measured experimentally on Earth. We lay out a method for deriving and testing equations of state, and deduce mass-radius and mass-pressure relations for key materials whose equation of state is reasonably well established, and for differentiated Fe/rock. We find that variations in the equation of state, such as may arise when extrapolating from low pressure data, can have significant effects on predicted mass- radius relations, and on planetary pressure profiles. The relations are compared with the observed masses and radii of planets and exoplanets.…
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