TL;DR
This study introduces MagmOc, a comprehensive magma ocean evolution model, to simulate the early volatile and atmospheric evolution of TRAPPIST-1 planets e, f, and g, providing insights into their water content and atmospheric states.
Contribution
The paper presents MagmOc, a new integrated model combining multiple processes to simulate magma ocean and atmospheric evolution of exoplanets, validated against known planets.
Findings
TRAPPIST-1 e, f, and g have water mass fractions up to 0.24.
Planets f and g likely had thick steam atmospheres with some oxygen.
Only 3-5% of initial water remains in the mantle after solidification.
Abstract
Recent observations of the potentially habitable planets TRAPPIST-1 e, f, and g suggest that they possess large water mass fractions of possibly several tens of wt% of water, even though the host star's activity should drive rapid atmospheric escape. These processes can photolyze water, generating free oxygen and possibly desiccating the planet. After the planets formed, their mantles were likely completely molten with volatiles dissolving and exsolving from the melt. In order to understand these planets and prepare for future observations, the magma ocean phase of these worlds must be understood. To simulate these planets, we have combined existing models of stellar evolution, atmospheric escape, tidal heating, radiogenic heating, magma ocean cooling, planetary radiation, and water-oxygen-iron geochemistry. We present MagmOc, a versatile magma ocean evolution model, validated against…
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