Growth and evolution of secondary volcanic atmospheres: I. Identifying the geological character of hot rocky planets
Philippa Liggins, Sean Jordan, Paul B. Rimmer, Oliver Shorttle

TL;DR
This study models volcanic atmospheres of hot rocky planets to identify how atmospheric composition reveals underlying planetary geochemistry, focusing on mantle oxidation state and H/C ratio effects.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled model of volcanic outgassing and atmospheric chemistry to classify atmospheric types based on mantle oxidation and H/C ratio, aiding planetary characterization.
Findings
Distinct atmospheric classes linked to mantle fO₂ levels.
Atmospheric composition is robust to H/C ratio variations.
Final atmospheric states depend on mantle fO₂, H/C ratio, and time.
Abstract
The geology of Earth and super-Earth sized planets will, in many cases, only be observable via their atmospheres. Here, we investigate secondary volcanic atmospheres as a key base case of how atmospheres may reflect planetary geochemistry. We couple volcanic outgassing with atmospheric chemistry models to simulate the growth of C-O-H-S-N atmospheres in thermochemical equilibrium, focusing on what information about a planet's mantle fO and bulk silicate H/C ratio could be determined by atmospheric observation. 800K volcanic atmospheres develop distinct compositional groups as the mantle fO is varied, which can be identified using sets of (often minor) indicator species: Class O, representing an oxidised mantle and containing SO and sulfur allotropes; Class I, formed by intermediate mantle fO's and containing CO, CH, CO and COS; and Class R, produced by reduced…
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