Magma ocean evolution at arbitrary redox state
Harrison Nicholls, Tim Lichtenberg, Dan J. Bower, and Raymond, Pierrehumbert

TL;DR
This study models how varying redox states, atmospheric composition, and orbital parameters influence magma ocean evolution and solidification timescales on rocky exoplanets, revealing key factors that determine planetary surface states.
Contribution
It introduces a 1D coupled interior-atmosphere model to simulate magma ocean evolution across diverse geochemical and orbital scenarios, expanding understanding beyond Earth-like conditions.
Findings
Orbital distance is the main factor affecting magma ocean duration.
Hydrogen-rich atmospheres can prevent or delay solidification.
Geochemical properties significantly influence magma ocean outcomes.
Abstract
Interactions between magma oceans and overlying atmospheres on young rocky planets leads to an evolving feedback of outgassing, greenhouse forcing, and mantle melt fraction. Previous studies have predominantly focused on the solidification of oxidized Earth-similar planets, but the diversity in mean density and irradiation observed in the low-mass exoplanet census motivate exploration of strongly varying geochemical scenarios. We aim to explore how variable redox properties alter the duration of magma ocean solidification, the equilibrium thermodynamic state, melt fraction of the mantle, and atmospheric composition. We develop a 1D coupled interior-atmosphere model that can simulate the time-evolution of lava planets. This is applied across a grid of fixed redox states, orbital separations, hydrogen endowments, and C/H ratios around a Sun-like star. The composition of these atmospheres…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Geological Studies and Exploration
