Strange messenger: A new history of hydrogen on Earth, as told by Xenon
Kevin J. Zahnle, Marko Gacesa, David C. Catling

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new model explaining how atmospheric xenon escaped Earth's atmosphere through ionization in hydrogen winds, accounting for its unique fractionation and loss during the Archean, influenced by solar activity and Earth's magnetic field.
Contribution
It introduces a novel ionization-based model for xenon escape, addressing limitations of previous hydrodynamic escape models and incorporating Earth's magnetic field effects.
Findings
Xe can escape as an ion in hydrogen winds under high EUV irradiation.
Xe escape likely occurred in episodes or through polar windows influenced by Earth's magnetic field.
Xe escape ceased when hydrogen levels or solar activity decreased.
Abstract
Atmospheric xenon is strongly mass fractionated, the result of a process that apparently continued through the Archean and perhaps beyond. Previous models that explain Xe fractionation by hydrodynamic hydrogen escape cannot gracefully explain how Xe escaped when Ar and Kr did not, nor allow Xe to escape in the Archean. Here we show that Xe is the only noble gas that can escape as an ion in a photo-ionized hydrogen wind, possible in the absence of a geomagnetic field or along polar magnetic field lines that open into interplanetary space. To quantify the hypothesis we construct new 1-D models of hydrodynamic diffusion-limited hydrogen escape from highly-irradiated CO-H-H atmospheres. The models reveal three minimum requirements for Xe escape: solar EUV irradiation needs to exceed that of the modern Sun; the total hydrogen mixing ratio in the atmosphere needs to exceed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
