The Possibility of Hydrogen-Water Demixing in Uranus, Neptune, K2-18b and TOI-270d
Saburo Howard, Ravit Helled, Armin Bergermann, Ronald Redmer

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential for hydrogen-water phase separation in Uranus, Neptune, and certain exoplanets, revealing its significant impact on planetary structure, evolution, and atmospheric composition, with implications for interpreting observational data.
Contribution
The paper combines planetary evolution models with ab initio phase diagrams to assess hydrogen-water demixing in specific planets, highlighting its role in planetary characteristics and observational signatures.
Findings
Demixing may deplete water in Uranus and Neptune's outer layers.
Hydrogen-water immiscibility can increase planetary radius by up to 20%.
Demixing could explain the absence of water features in K2-18b's spectrum.
Abstract
The internal structures of Uranus and Neptune remain unknown. In addition, sub-Neptunes are now thought to be the most common type of exoplanets. Understanding the physical processes that govern the interiors of such planets is therefore essential. Phase separation between hydrogen and water may occur in cold, water-rich intermediate-mass planets. We assess whether it could occur in Uranus, Neptune, K2-18\,b and TOI-270\,d, and investigate its effect on the planetary evolution and inferred internal structure. We couple planetary evolution models with recent \textit{ab initio} calculations of the hydrogen-water phase diagram, allowing for temperature shifts to account for uncertainties in miscibility gaps. We find that demixing may occur and could lead to a complete depletion of water in the outermost regions of Uranus and Neptune. Temperature offsets of up to 1100~K lead to a depleted…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
