4.6 Article

Mixing time of heterogeneities in a buoyancy-dominated magma ocean

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 236, Issue 2, Pages 764-777

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggad452

Keywords

Numerical modelling; Planetary interiors; Magma ocean; Mixing

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This study investigates the efficiency of convective mixing in the Earth's mantle during the early molten and solid-state stages. By computing finite-time Lyapunov exponents, it is found that in a fully liquid magma ocean, the mixing time is short, suggesting that early mantle heterogeneities cannot survive.
During the accretion stage, large impacts provided sufficient energy to melt the entire mantle into a terrestrial magma ocean. Processes occurring in the magma ocean may have led to the formation of heterogeneities still found in modern ocean island basalts. So far, no definitive mechanism exists to explain the survival of early heterogeneities for approximately 4.5 Ga. Addressing this question requires understanding the efficiency of convective mixing during both the early molten and the solid-state stages experienced by the Earth's mantle. While mixing in the solid mantle and in an essentially crystallized magma ocean has been relatively well documented, the efficiency of convective mixing in a liquid magma ocean has received less attention. In this paper we characterized the mixing efficiency of a convecting fluid in a rotating spherical shell, accounting for inertial effects, by computing finite-time Lyapunov exponents (i.e. the Lagrangian strain rate). We conducted a series of numerical experiments for a regime where the influence of the buoyancy force dominates that of rotation and we derived scaling laws to predict the mixing efficiency. We found that for a terrestrial magma ocean, in its fully liquid state, mixing time is of the order of a few minutes or less, even for initially large (similar to 1000 km) heterogeneities. Therefore, passive early mantle heterogeneities cannot survive a fully molten magma ocean stage. This suggests that short-lived heterogeneities (e.g. 182Hf-182W) were either created at the end of the accretional stage, or were stored in deeper regions of the Earth.

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