The habitability of a stagnant-lid Earth
N. Tosi, M. Godolt, B. Stracke, T. Ruedas, J. L. Grenfell, D., H\"oning, A. Nikolaou, A.-C. Plesa, D. Breuer, T. Spohn

TL;DR
This study models the thermal evolution, volcanic outgassing, and climate of stagnant-lid Earth-like planets to assess their potential habitability over billions of years, showing they can sustain liquid water.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled 1D model of interior evolution, volcanic outgassing, and climate for stagnant-lid planets, a scenario less explored compared to plate tectonics.
Findings
Stagnant-lid planets can maintain habitable conditions over geological timescales.
Surface temperatures generally allow liquid water at 1 au throughout evolution.
Habitable zone boundaries depend on outgassed CO₂ and H₂O levels.
Abstract
Plate tectonics is a fundamental component for the habitability of the Earth. Yet whether it is a recurrent feature of terrestrial bodies orbiting other stars or unique to the Earth is unknown. The stagnant lid may rather be the most common tectonic expression on such bodies. To understand whether a stagnant-lid planet can be habitable, i.e. host liquid water at its surface, we model the thermal evolution of the mantle, volcanic outgassing of HO and CO, and resulting climate of an Earth-like planet lacking plate tectonics. We used a 1D model of parameterized convection to simulate the evolution of melt generation and the build-up of an atmosphere of HO and CO over 4.5 Gyr. We then employed a 1D radiative-convective atmosphere model to calculate the global mean atmospheric temperature and the boundaries of the habitable zone (HZ). The evolution of the interior is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Astro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration
