Near-equilibrium isotope fractionation during planetesimal evaporation
E.D. Young, A. Shahar, F. Nimmo, H.E. Schlichting, E.A. Schauble, H., Tang, and J. Labidi

TL;DR
This study investigates how near-equilibrium isotope fractionation occurred during planetesimal evaporation in the early solar system, explaining observed isotopic compositions of Earth materials through steady-state vapor processes.
Contribution
It models the conditions and mechanisms of near-equilibrium isotope fractionation during planetesimal evaporation, linking it to Earth's isotopic signatures and early solar system processes.
Findings
Steady-state rock vapor forms within minutes to hours during evaporation.
Vapor pressure approaches 95% saturation at steady state for a 700 km body.
Earth's isotopic composition suggests 12% Mg and 15% Si loss via near-equilibrium evaporation.
Abstract
Silicon and Mg in differentiated rocky bodies exhibit heavy isotope enrichments that have been attributed to evaporation of partially or entirely molten planetesimals. We evaluate the mechanisms of planetesimal evaporation in the early solar system and the conditions that controlled attendant isotope fractionations. Energy balance at the surface of a body accreted within ~1 Myr of CAI formation and heated from within by 26Al decay results in internal temperatures exceeding the silicate solidus, producing a transient magma ocean with a thin surface boundary layer of order < 1 meter that would be subject to foundering. Bodies that are massive enough to form magma oceans by radioisotope decay (ge 0.1%) can retain hot rock vapor even in the absence of ambient nebular gas. We find that a steady-state rock vapor forms within minutes to hours and results from a balance between rates of magma…
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