Anatomy of rocky planets formed by rapid pebble accretion III. Partitioning of volatiles between planetary core, mantle, and atmosphere
Anders Johansen (University of Copenhagen, Lund Observatory), Thomas, Ronnet (Lund Observatory), Martin Schiller (University of Copenhagen),, Zhengbin Deng (University of Copenhagen), Martin Bizzarro (University of, Copenhagen)

TL;DR
This study models how volatiles like hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen are distributed and released during rocky planet formation via pebble accretion, explaining differences among Earth, Venus, and Mars.
Contribution
It provides a detailed model of volatile partitioning and outgassing during rapid pebble accretion, linking planetary composition to formation processes.
Findings
Core stores over 90% of Earth's H and C
Mars's mantle remains low in oxidation, mainly outgassing H2
Nitrogen is evenly partitioned between core and atmosphere
Abstract
Volatile molecules containing hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen are key components of planetary atmospheres. In the pebble accretion model for rocky planet formation, these volatile species are accreted during the main planetary formation phase. For this study, we modelled the partitioning of volatiles within a growing planet and the outgassing to the surface. The core stores more than 90\% of the hydrogen and carbon budgets of Earth for realistic values of the partition coefficients of H and C between metal and silicate melts. The magma oceans of Earth and Venus are sufficiently deep to undergo oxidation of ferrous Fe to ferric Fe. This increased oxidation state leads to the outgassing of primarily CO and HO from the magma ocean of Earth. In contrast, the oxidation state of Mars' mantle remains low and the main outgassed hydrogen carrier is H. This hydrogen…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space Exploration and Technology
