The extreme physical properties of the CoRoT-7b super-Earth
A. L\'eger, O. Grasset, B. Fegley, F. Codron, A. F. Albarede, P., Barge, R. Barnes, P. Cance, S. Carpy, F. Catalano, C. Cavarroc, O. Demangeon,, S. Ferraz-Mello, P. Gabor, J.-M. Griessmeier, J. Leibacher, G. Libourel, A-S., Maurin, S.N. Raymond, D. Rouan, B. Samuel, L. Schaefer

TL;DR
This paper explores the extreme physical properties of CoRoT-7b, a rocky super-Earth close to its star, highlighting its potential lava ocean, atmospheric erosion, and defining a new class of planets called "Lava-ocean planets."
Contribution
It introduces the concept of Lava-ocean planets and analyzes CoRoT-7b's physical characteristics, suggesting a rocky composition with extreme surface and atmospheric conditions.
Findings
CoRoT-7b likely has an Earth-like composition.
The planet's dayside temperature reaches around 2474 K.
The atmosphere is extremely thin, composed of rocky vapors.
Abstract
The search for rocky exoplanets plays an important role in our quest for extra-terrestrial life. Here, we discuss the extreme physical properties possible for the first characterized rocky super-Earth, CoRoT-7b (R_pl = 1.58 \pm 0.10 R_Earth, Mpl = 6.9 \pm 1.2 M_Earth). It is extremely close to its star (a = 0.0171 AU = 4.48 R_st), with its spin and orbital rotation likely synchronized. The comparison of its location in the (Mpl, Rpl) plane with the predictions of planetary models for different compositions points to an Earth-like composition, even if the error bars of the measured quantities and the partial degeneracy of the models prevent a definitive conclusion. The proximity to its star provides an additional constraint on the model. It implies a high extreme-UV flux and particle wind, and the corresponding efficient erosion of the planetary atmosphere especially for volatile species…
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