4.5 Article

Experimental Determination of Mantle Solidi and Melt Compositions for Two Likely Rocky Exoplanet Compositions

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 126, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JE006731

Keywords

exoplanet; experimental petrology; melt initiation; melt migration; partial melting; volatile saturation

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [026257-001]
  2. ASU Graduate College Completion Fellowship
  3. ASU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Summer Research Fellowship
  4. ASU-NExSS grant [NNX15AD53G]
  5. National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure [ECCS-1542160]
  6. NASA's Science Mission Directorate

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Knowledge of geologic characteristics of rocky exoplanets is crucial for assessing their potential habitability. Experimental data on two hypothetical rocky exoplanet compositions reveal differences in melting temperatures and mantle dynamics, indicating the importance of understanding surface chemistry for potential habitable exoplanets.
For rocky exoplanets, knowledge of their geologic characteristics such as composition and mineralogy, surface recycling mechanisms, and volcanic behavior are key to determining their suitability to host life. Thus, determining exoplanet habitability requires an understanding of surface chemistry, and understanding the composition of exoplanet surfaces necessitates applying methods from the field of igneous petrology. Piston-cylinder partial melting experiments were conducted on two hypothetical rocky exoplanet bulk silicate compositions. HEX1, a composition with molar Mg/Si = 1.42 (higher than bulk silicate Earth's Mg/Si = 1.23) yields a solidus similar to that of Earth's undepleted mantle. However, HEX2, a composition with molar Ca/Al = 1.07 (higher than Earth Ca/Al = 0.72) has a solidus with a slope of similar to 10 degrees C/kbar (vs. similar to 15 degrees C/kbar for Earth) and as result, has much lower melting temperatures than Earth. The majority of predicted adiabats point toward the likely formation of a silicate magma ocean for exoplanets with a mantle composition similar to HEX2. For adiabats that do intersect HEX2's solidus, decompression melting initiates at pressures more than 4x greater than in the modern Earth's undepleted mantle. The experimental partial melt compositions for these exoplanet mantle analogs are broadly similar to primitive terrestrial magmas but with higher CaO, and for the HEX2 composition, higher SiO2 for a given degree of melting. This first of its kind exoplanetary experimental data can be used to calibrate future exoplanet petrologic models and predict volatile solubilities, volcanic degassing, and crust compositions for exoplanets with bulk compositions and integral O-2 similar to those explored herein.

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