Loss and fractionation of noble gas isotopes and moderately volatile elements from planetary embryos and early Venus, Earth and Mars
H. Lammer, M. Scherf, H. Kurokawa, Y. Ueno, C. Burger, T. Maindl, C., P. Johnstone, M. Leitzinger, M. Benedikt, L. Fossati, K. G. Kislyakova, B., Marty, G. Avice, B. Fegley, P. Odert

TL;DR
This paper reviews how atmospheric escape and outgassing processes have fractionated noble gases and volatile elements in early planetary atmospheres, influencing planetary composition and evolution of Venus, Earth, and Mars.
Contribution
It synthesizes current knowledge on atmospheric escape, outgassing, and isotope fractionation, providing new insights into early planetary atmospheres and their evolution.
Findings
Proto-Venus and Earth captured small primordial atmospheres lost by hydrodynamic escape.
Atmospheric escape processes can significantly alter noble gas isotope ratios.
Modeling constrains early atmospheric evolution and volatile loss on terrestrial planets.
Abstract
Here we discuss the current state of knowledge on how atmospheric escape processes can fractionate noble gas isotopes and moderately volatile rock-forming elements that populate primordial atmospheres, magma ocean related environments, and catastrophically outgassed steam atmospheres. Variations of isotopes and volatile elements in different planetary reservoirs keep information about atmospheric escape, composition and even the source of accreting material. We summarize our knowledge on atmospheric isotope ratios and discuss the latest evidence that proto-Venus and Earth captured small H-dominated primordial atmospheres that were lost by EUV-driven hydrodynamic escape after the disk dispersed. All relevant thermal and non-thermal atmospheric escape processes that can fractionate various isotopes and volatile elements are discussed. Erosion of early atmospheres, crust and mantle by…
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