论文标题
地幔矿物学限制到岩石行星水库
Mantle mineralogy limits to rocky planet water inventories
论文作者
论文摘要
岩石星球上名义上无水的矿物质可以隔离整个水的海洋,从而对散装水库存产生限制。在这里,我们可以预测其组成矿物中水的热力学限制溶解度的地幔水能力。我们报告了(i)宿主星形耐火元件丰度,(ii)现实的地幔温度情景和(iii)行星质量引起的地幔水容量的变化。我们发现,足够大的行星几乎毫无疑问地稳定钙钛矿,上面有一个干燥的下层地幔,上面是高水位容量过渡区,可以用作地球内部水中水运输的瓶颈。由于定义下地幔的Ringwoodite-perovskite相边界的压力对行星质量大致不敏感,因此随着行星质量的增加,地幔储层的相对贡献将减小。因此,大岩石行星的地幔水容量不成比例。在实践中,我们的结果将代表行星底层中其原始岩浆海洋的初始水浓度剖面。我们建议,在岩浆海洋凝固后立即形成大量岩石行星的积聚水预算,会立即形成地面海洋或大气水蒸气,这可能会减少这些托管土地的行星的可能性。这项工作是迈向理解行星深水循环的一步,由流变学和融化介导的热进化以及水世界的频率。
Nominally anhydrous minerals in rocky planet mantles can sequester oceans of water as a whole, giving a constraint on bulk water inventories. Here we predict mantle water capacities from the thermodynamically-limited solubility of water in their constituent minerals. We report the variability of mantle water capacity due to (i) host star refractory element abundances that set mineralogy, (ii) realistic mantle temperature scenarios, and (iii) planet mass. We find that planets large enough to stabilise perovskite almost unfailingly have a dry lower mantle, topped by a high-water-capacity transition zone which may act as a bottleneck for water transport within the planet's interior. Because the pressure of the ringwoodite-perovskite phase boundary defining the lower mantle is roughly insensitive to planet mass, the relative contribution of the upper mantle reservoir will diminish with increasing planet mass. Large rocky planets therefore have disproportionately small mantle water capacities. In practice, our results would represent initial water concentration profiles in planetary mantles where their primordial magma oceans are water-saturated. We suggest that a considerable proportion of massive rocky planets' accreted water budgets would form surface oceans or atmospheric water vapour immediately after magma ocean solidification, possibly diminishing the likelihood of these planets hosting land. This work is a step towards understanding planetary deep water cycling, thermal evolution as mediated by rheology and melting, and the frequency of waterworlds.