Diversity of low-mass planet atmospheres in the C-H-O-N-S-Cl system with interior dissolution, nonideality, and condensation: Application to TRAPPIST-1e and sub-Neptunes
Dan J. Bower, Maggie A. Thompson, Kaustubh Hakim, Meng Tian, and Paolo A. Sossi

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of low-mass exoplanet atmospheres considering interior dissolution, nonideality, and condensation, revealing diverse atmospheric compositions and potential habitability indicators for planets like TRAPPIST-1e and sub-Neptunes.
Contribution
It introduces the open-source Atmodeller Python package to simulate complex atmospheric processes, integrating interior-atmosphere interactions with chemical equilibria and condensation effects.
Findings
CO-dominated atmospheres are common during magma ocean stages.
Approximately 40% of simulations show coexistence of water, graphite, sulfur, and ammonium chloride.
High-pressure conditions lead to CH4-rich atmospheres in sub-Neptunes.
Abstract
A quantitative understanding of the nature and composition of low-mass rocky (exo)planet atmospheres during their evolution is needed to interpret observations. The magma ocean stage of terrestrial- and sub-Neptune planets permits mass exchange between their interiors and atmospheres, during which the mass and speciation of the atmosphere is dictated by the planet's volatile budget, chemical equilibria, and gas/fluid solubility in molten rock. As the atmosphere cools, it is modified by gas-phase reactions and condensation. We combine these processes into an open-source Python package built using JAX called Atmodeller, and perform calculations for planet sizes and conditions analogous to TRAPPIST-1e and K2-18b. For TRAPPIST-1e-like planets, our simulations indicate that CO-dominated atmospheres are prevalent during the magma ocean stage, which, upon isochemical cooling, predominantly…
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