The Role of Formation Location in Shaping Sulfur-, Nitrogen-, and Carbon-Bearing Species in Super-Earth and Sub-Neptune Atmospheres
Aaron Werlen, Remo Burn, Caroline Dorn, Lukas Felix, Annika Salmi

TL;DR
This study investigates how interior-atmosphere chemical equilibration affects atmospheric composition in super-Earths and sub-Neptunes, revealing key indicators of formation location and the impact of magma ocean processes.
Contribution
It couples planet formation models with chemical equilibrium calculations to analyze how interior processes modify atmospheric signatures related to formation zones.
Findings
Interior-atmosphere equilibration alters elemental ratios and molecular abundances.
Atmospheric C/O ratio remains higher for planets formed outside the ice line.
Nitrogen is depleted through dissolution into the silicate melt, producing low nitrogen abundances.
Abstract
Atmospheric compositions of sub-Neptunes and super-Earths are often interpreted as tracers of formation location relative to volatile ice lines. However, prolonged magma oceans can chemically equilibrate with primordial atmospheres and modify accreted volatile signatures. In this study, we couple a synthetic planet population from the Bern Generation III formation model to an extended global chemical equilibrium framework including sulfur and nitrogen chemistry, and compare accreted and equilibrated compositions for 1200 young planets shortly after formation ( 40 Myr) formed inside and outside the water ice line. We find that interior-atmosphere equilibration systematically alters elemental ratios and molecular abundances. The atmospheric C/O ratio shifts relative to the accreted state and remains systematically higher for planets formed outside the ice line.…
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