# Runaway climate cooling of ocean planets in the habitable zone: a   consequence of seafloor weathering enhanced by melting of high-pressure ice

**Authors:** Akifumi Nakayama, Takanori Kodama, Masahiro Ikoma, and Yutaka Abe

arXiv: 1907.00827 · 2019-07-15

## TL;DR

This study shows that high heat fluxes at mid-ocean ridges can melt high-pressure ice on ocean planets, enabling seafloor weathering and leading to extremely cold, snowball-like climates even within the habitable zone.

## Contribution

It introduces integrated climate models that include HP ice melting and seafloor weathering, revealing a mechanism for cold climates on water-rich planets.

## Key findings

- High heat flux melts HP ice, enabling seafloor weathering.
- Massive ocean planets tend to have snowball climates.
- High-pressure ice melting fixes seafloor temperature, maintaining cold climates.

## Abstract

Terrestrial planets covered globally with thick oceans (termed ocean planets) in the habitable zone were previously inferred to have extremely hot climates in most cases. This is because ${\rm H_2O}$ high-pressure (HP) ice on the seafloor prevents chemical weathering and, thus, removal of atmospheric CO$_2$. Previous studies, however, ignored melting of the HP ice and horizontal variation in heat flux from oceanic crusts. Here we examine whether high heat fluxes near the mid-ocean ridge melts the HP ice and thereby removes atmospheric ${\rm CO_2}$. We develop integrated climate models of an Earth-size ocean planet with plate tectonics for different ocean masses, which include the effects of HP ice melting, seafloor weathering, and the carbonate-silicate geochemical carbon cycle. We find that the heat flux near the mid-ocean ridge is high enough to melt the ice, enabling seafloor weathering. In contrast to the previous theoretical prediction, we show that climates of terrestrial planets with massive oceans lapse into extremely cold ones (or snowball states) with CO$_2$-poor atmospheres. Such extremely cold climates are achieved mainly because the HP ice melting fixes seafloor temperature at the melting temperature, thereby keeping a high weathering flux regardless of surface temperature. We estimate that ocean planets with oceans several tens of the Earth's ocean mass no longer maintain temperate climates. These results suggest that terrestrial planets with extremely cold climates exist even in the habitable zone beyond the solar system, given the frequency of water-rich planets predicted by planet formation theories.

## Full text

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## Figures

13 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00827/full.md

## References

80 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00827/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00827