3.8 Article

A Closer Earth and the Faint Young Sun Paradox: Modification of the Laws of Gravitation or Sun/Earth Mass Losses?

Journal

GALAXIES
Volume 1, Issue 3, Pages 192-209

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/galaxies1030192

Keywords

Archean period; paleoclimatology; solar physics; experimental studies of gravity; relativity and gravitation; modified theories of gravity; celestial mechanics

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Given a solar luminosity L-Ar = 0.75L(0) at the beginning of the Archean 3:8 Ga ago, where L-0 is the present-day one, if the heliocentric distance, r, of the Earth was r(Ar) = 0.956r(0), the solar irradiance would have been as large as I-Ar = 0.82I(0). It would have allowed for a liquid ocean on the terrestrial surface, which, otherwise, would have been frozen, contrary to the empirical evidence. By further assuming that some physical mechanism subsequently displaced the Earth towards its current distance in such a way that the irradiance stayed substantially constant over the entire Archean from 3.8 to 2. 5 Ga ago, a relative recession per year as large as r/r approximate to 3.4 x 10(-11) a(-1) would have been required. Although such a figure is roughly of the same order of magnitude of the value of the Hubble parameter 3.8 Ga ago H-Ar = 1.192H(0) = 8.2 x 10(-11) a(-1), standard general relativity rules out cosmological explanations for the hypothesized Earth's recession rate. Instead, a class of modified theories of gravitation with nonminimal coupling between the matter and the metric naturally predicts a secular variation of the relative distance of a localized two-body system, thus yielding a potentially viable candidate to explain the putative recession of the Earth's orbit. Another competing mechanism of classical origin that could, in principle, allow for the desired effect is the mass loss, which either the Sun or the Earth itself may have experienced during the Archean. On the one hand, this implies that our planet should have lost 2 % of its present mass in the form of eroded/evaporated hydrosphere. On the other hand, it is widely believed that the Sun could have lost mass at an enhanced rate, due to a stronger solar wind in the past for not more than approximate to 0.2-0.3 Ga.

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