Interior dynamics of super-Earth 55 Cancri e
Tobias G. Meier, Dan J. Bower, Tim Lichtenberg, Mark Hammond, Paul J., Tackley

TL;DR
This study models the mantle convection of super-Earth 55 Cancri e, revealing how surface temperature contrasts influence interior dynamics and potential atmospheric composition, with implications for understanding magma oceans and heat circulation.
Contribution
It introduces 2D mantle convection simulations constrained by surface temperature contrasts to explore interior dynamics of a tidally locked super-Earth.
Findings
Large super-plumes form on the dayside with a magma ocean.
Cold material descends on the nightside without strong downwellings.
Upwelling may be biased towards the dayside, affecting atmospheric composition.
Abstract
The ultra-short-period super-Earth 55 Cancri e has a measured radius of 1.8 Earth radii. Previous thermal phase curve observations suggest a strong temperature contrast between the dayside and nightside of around 1000 K with the hottest point shifted degrees east from the substellar point, indicating some degree of heat circulation. The dayside (and potentially even the nightside) is hot enough to harbour a magma ocean. We use results from general circulation models (GCMs) of atmospheres to constrain the surface temperature contrasts. There is still a large uncertainty on the vigour and style of mantle convection in super-Earths, especially those that experience stellar irradiation large enough to harbour a magma ocean. In this work, we aim to constrain the mantle dynamics of the tidally locked lava world 55 Cancri e. Using the surface temperature contrasts as boundary…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
