Convective outgassing efficiency in planetary magma oceans: insights from computational fluid dynamics
Arnaud Salvador, Henri Samuel

TL;DR
This study uses computational fluid dynamics to assess how effectively convective motions in planetary magma oceans can transport volatiles to the surface, revealing that degassing efficiency may be lower than previously assumed, impacting planetary evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first fluid dynamics-based analysis of magma ocean outgassing efficiency, deriving simple predictive expressions and highlighting the influence of planetary parameters.
Findings
Convective velocities determine outgassing efficiency.
Complete outgassing may take longer than magma ocean lifetime.
Planet size and initial water content significantly affect degassing.
Abstract
Planetary atmospheres are commonly thought to result from the efficient outgassing of cooling magma oceans. During this stage, vigorous convective motions in the molten interior are believed to rapidly transport the dissolved volatiles to shallow depths where they exsolve and burst at the surface. This assumption of efficient degassing and atmosphere formation has important implications for planetary evolution, but has never been tested against fluid dynamics considerations. Yet, during a convective cycle, only a finite fraction of the magma ocean can reach the shallow depths where volatiles exsolution can occur, and a large-scale circulation may prevent a substantial magma ocean volume from rapidly reaching the planetary surface. Therefore, we conducted computational fluid dynamics experiments of vigorous 2D and 3D Rayleigh-B\'enard convection at Prandtl number of unity to characterize…
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