Solubility of water in peridotite liquids and the prevalence of steam atmospheres on rocky planets
Paolo A. Sossi, Peter M. E. Tollan, James Badro, Dan J. Bower

TL;DR
This study measures water solubility in mantle-like liquids to understand early planetary atmospheres, revealing that high water solubility in magmas influences the rarity of steam atmospheres on rocky planets.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental determination of water solubility in peridotite liquids across various oxygen fugacities, enhancing understanding of early planetary atmospheres.
Findings
Water solubility in peridotite liquids is 10-25% lower than in basaltic liquids.
Higher temperature decreases water solubility in mantle melts.
Steam atmospheres are rare due to high water solubility in magmas.
Abstract
Atmospheres are products of time-integrated mass exchange between the surface of a planet and its interior. On Earth and other planetary bodies, magma oceans likely marked significant atmosphere-forming events, during which both steam- and carbon-rich atmospheres may have been generated. However, the nature of Earth's early atmosphere, and those around other rocky planets, remains unclear for lack of constraints on the solubility of water in liquids of appropriate composition. Here we determine water solubility in 14 peridotite liquids, representative of Earth's mantle, synthesised in a laser-heated aerodynamic levitation furnace. We explore oxygen fugacities (fO) between -1.9 and +6.0 log units relative to the iron-w\"ustite buffer at constant temperature (217350 K) and total pressure (1 bar). The resulting fHO ranged from 0 to 0.027 bar and fH from 0 to 0.064 bar.…
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