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Exoplanet secondary atmosphere loss and revival
by
Kite, Edwin S.
, Barnett, Megan N.
in
Astrochemistry
/ Atmosphere
/ Circumstellar habitable zone
/ Crystallization
/ Depletion
/ Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
/ Extrasolar planets
/ Magma
/ Outgassing
/ Physical Sciences
/ Planetary orbits
/ Solar system
/ Stars
/ Terrestrial planets
/ Venus
/ Venus atmosphere
/ Volatile compounds
/ Weight
2020
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Exoplanet secondary atmosphere loss and revival
by
Kite, Edwin S.
, Barnett, Megan N.
in
Astrochemistry
/ Atmosphere
/ Circumstellar habitable zone
/ Crystallization
/ Depletion
/ Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
/ Extrasolar planets
/ Magma
/ Outgassing
/ Physical Sciences
/ Planetary orbits
/ Solar system
/ Stars
/ Terrestrial planets
/ Venus
/ Venus atmosphere
/ Volatile compounds
/ Weight
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Exoplanet secondary atmosphere loss and revival
by
Kite, Edwin S.
, Barnett, Megan N.
in
Astrochemistry
/ Atmosphere
/ Circumstellar habitable zone
/ Crystallization
/ Depletion
/ Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
/ Extrasolar planets
/ Magma
/ Outgassing
/ Physical Sciences
/ Planetary orbits
/ Solar system
/ Stars
/ Terrestrial planets
/ Venus
/ Venus atmosphere
/ Volatile compounds
/ Weight
2020
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Journal Article
Exoplanet secondary atmosphere loss and revival
2020
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Overview
The next step on the path toward another Earth is to find atmospheres similar to those of Earth and Venus—high–molecular-weight (secondary) atmospheres—on rocky exoplanets. Many rocky exoplanets are born with thick (>10 kbar) H₂-dominated atmospheres but subsequently lose their H₂; this process has no known Solar System analog. We study the consequences of early loss of a thick H₂ atmosphere for subsequent occurrence of a high–molecular-weight atmosphere using a simple model of atmosphere evolution (including atmosphere loss to space, magma ocean crystallization, and volcanic outgassing). We also calculate atmosphere survival for rocky worlds that start with no H₂. Our results imply that most rocky exoplanets orbiting closer to their star than the habitable zone that were formed with thick H₂-dominated atmospheres lack high–molecularweight atmospheres today. During early magma ocean crystallization, high–molecular-weight species usually do not form long-lived high–molecular-weight atmospheres; instead, they are lost to space alongside H₂. This early volatile depletion also makes it more difficult for later volcanic outgassing to revive the atmosphere. However, atmospheres should persist on worlds that start with abundant volatiles (for example, water worlds). Our results imply that in order to find high–molecular-weight atmospheres on warm exoplanets orbiting M-stars, we should target worlds that formed H₂-poor, that have anomalously large radii, or that orbit less active stars.
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Subject
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