A mineralogical reason why all exoplanets cannot be equally oxidising
Claire Marie Guimond, Oliver Shorttle, Sean Jordan, John F. Rudge

TL;DR
This paper explores how mineralogy influences the oxidation state of exoplanet mantles, revealing significant variability that impacts atmospheric composition and outgassing, with implications for detecting atmospheric gases.
Contribution
It demonstrates that mineralogical differences alone can cause at least two orders of magnitude variation in mantle oxidation states across exoplanets.
Findings
Mineralogy causes at least 100-fold variation in mantle fO2.
Variations in mineralogy influence outgassed atmospheric gases.
Planets around different star types may outgas distinct atmospheric compounds.
Abstract
From core to atmosphere, the oxidation states of elements in a planet shape its character. Oxygen fugacity (fO) is one parameter indicating these likely oxidation states. The ongoing search for atmospheres on rocky exoplanets benefits from understanding the plausible variety of their compositions, which depends strongly on their oxidation states -- and if derived from interior outgassing, on the fO at the top of their silicate mantles. This fO must vary across compositionally-diverse exoplanets, but for a given planet its value is unconstrained insofar as it depends on how iron (the dominant multivalent element) is partitioned between its 2+ and 3+ oxidation states. Here we focus on another factor influencing how oxidising a mantle is -- a factor modulating fO even at fixed Fe/Fe -- the planet's mineralogy. Only certain minerals (e.g., pyroxenes)…
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