Potential Melting of Extrasolar Planets by Tidal Dissipation
Darryl Z. Seligman, Adina D. Feinstein, Dong Lai, Luis Welbanks, Aster, G. Taylor, Juliette Becker, Fred C. Adams, Marvin Morgan, Jennifer B. Bergner

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential for tidal heating to cause runaway melting and volcanic activity in exoplanets with liquid cores, identifying conditions under which such phenomena are likely and assessing observational signatures.
Contribution
It introduces a generic mechanism for tidal-induced runaway melting in composite planets and applies it to identify promising exoplanet candidates for active volcanism.
Findings
More than 90% core melting for certain rigidity ratios.
L98-59 terrestrial planets are promising candidates for volcanism.
Synthetic spectra suggest detectable volcanic gases with JWST.
Abstract
Tidal heating on Io due to its finite eccentricity was predicted to drive surface volcanic activity, which was subsequently confirmed by the spacecrafts. Although the volcanic activity in Io is more complex, in theory volcanism can be driven by runaway melting in which the tidal heating increases as the mantle thickness decreases. We show that this runaway melting mechanism is generic for a composite planetary body with liquid core and solid mantle, provided that (i) the mantle rigidity, , is comparable to the central pressure, i.e. for a body with density , surface gravitational acceleration , and radius , (ii) the surface is not molten, (iii) tides deposit sufficient energy, and (iv) the planet has nonzero eccentricity. We calculate the approximate liquid core radius as a function of $\mu/ (\rho g R_{\rm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries
