Thermal Evolution of Lava Planets
Mahesh Herath, Charles-\'Edouard Boukar\'e, Nicolas B. Cowan

TL;DR
This paper models the thermal evolution of tidally locked lava planets, showing how magma oceans form and persist on the night-side under certain conditions, with implications for observational probes of their thermal history.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive thermal evolution model for lava planets, including the effects of heat transport and tidal heating, which was not previously detailed.
Findings
Night-side magma solidifies within 800 million years without heat transfer.
Magma oceans can be sustained on the night-side with sufficient heat transfer or tidal heating.
Night-side cooling is a runaway process leading to solidification, sensitive to thermal conditions.
Abstract
Rocky planets are thought to form with a magma ocean that quickly solidifies. The horizontal and vertical extent of this magma ocean depends on the interior thermal evolution of the planet, and possibly exogenous processes such as planet migration. We present a model for simulating the thermal history of tidally locked lava planets. We initiate the model with a completely molten mantle and evolve it for ten billion years. We adopt a fixed surface temperature of 3000 K for the irradiated day-side, but allow the night-side temperature to evolve along with the underlying layers. We simulate planets of radius 1.0 and 1.5 with different core mass fractions, although the latter does not significantly impact the thermal evolution. We confirm that the day-side magma ocean on these planets has a depth that depends on the planetary radius. The night-side, on the other…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-pressure geophysics and materials · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
