The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

Fizzy Super-Earths: Impacts of Magma Composition on the Bulk Density and Structure of Lava Worlds

  • Kiersten M. Boley,
  • Wendy R. Panero,
  • Cayman T. Unterborn,
  • Joseph G. Schulze,
  • Romy Rodríguez Martínez,
  • Ji Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acea85
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 954, no. 2
p. 202

Abstract

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Lava worlds are a potential emerging population of Super-Earths that are on close-in orbits around their host stars, with likely partially molten mantles. To date, few studies have addressed the impact of magma on the observed properties of a planet. At ambient conditions, magma is less dense than solid rock; however, it is also more compressible with increasing pressure. Therefore, it is unclear how large-scale magma oceans affect planet observables, such as bulk density. We update ExoPlex , a thermodynamically self-consistent planet interior software, to include anhydrous, hydrous (2.2 wt% H _2 O), and carbonated magmas (5.2 wt% CO _2 ). We find that Earth-like planets with magma oceans larger than ∼1.5 R _⊕ and ∼3.2 M _⊕ are modestly denser than an equivalent-mass solid planet. From our model, three classes of mantle structures emerge for magma ocean planets: (1) a mantle magma ocean, (2) a surface magma ocean, and (3) one consisting of a surface magma ocean, a solid rock layer, and a basal magma ocean. The class of planets in which a basal magma ocean is present may sequester dissolved volatiles on billion-year timescales, in which a 4 M _⊕ mass planet can trap more than 130 times the mass of water than in Earth’s present-day oceans and 1000 times the carbon in the Earth’s surface and crust.

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