Growth and Evolution of Secondary Volcanic Atmospheres: II. The Importance of Kinetics
Philippa Liggins, Sean Jordan, Paul B. Rimmer, Oliver Shorttle

TL;DR
This study investigates the kinetics of volcanic atmospheres, revealing that chemical equilibrium assumptions are only valid above 700K, impacting biosignature detection and planetary interior interpretations.
Contribution
It provides the first kinetic analysis of volcanic atmosphere relaxation timescales, challenging equilibrium-based models at lower temperatures and implications for biosignature reliability.
Findings
Thermochemical equilibrium only valid above ~700K in volcanic atmospheres.
Slow kinetics at lower temperatures inhibit biosignature formation.
Volcanic gases reflect degassing conditions, complicating interior-atmosphere links.
Abstract
Volcanism is a major and long-term source of volatile elements such as C and H to Earth's atmosphere, likely has been to Venus's atmosphere, and may be for exoplanets. Models simulating volcanic growth of atmospheres often make one of two assumptions: either that atmospheric speciation is set by the high-temperature equilibrium of volcanism; or, that volcanic gases thermochemically re-equilibrate to the new, lower, temperature of the surface environment. In the latter case it has been suggested that volcanic atmospheres may create biosignature false positives. Here, we test the assumptions underlying such inferences by performing chemical kinetic calculations to estimate the relaxation timescale of volcanically-derived atmospheres to thermochemical equilibrium, in a simple 0D atmosphere neglecting photochemistry and reaction catalysis. We demonstrate that for planets with volcanic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Paleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
