ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Evolution and Spectral Response of a Steam Atmosphere for Early Earth with a coupled climate-interior model

78   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Nisha Katyal
 تاريخ النشر 2019
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The evolution of Earths early atmosphere and the emergence of habitable conditions on our planet are intricately coupled with the development and duration of the magma ocean phase during the early Hadean period (4 to 4.5 Ga). In this paper, we deal with the evolution of the steam atmosphere during the magma ocean period. We obtain the outgoing longwave radiation using a line-by-line radiative transfer code GARLIC. Our study suggests that an atmosphere consisting of pure H$_{2}$O, built as a result of outgassing extends the magma ocean lifetime to several million years. The thermal emission as a function of solidification timescale of magma ocean is shown. We study the effect of thermal dissociation of H$_{2}$O at higher temperatures by applying atmospheric chemical equilibrium which results in the formation of H$_{2}$ and O$_{2}$ during the early phase of the magma ocean. A 1-6% reduction in the OLR is seen. We also obtain the effective height of the atmosphere by calculating the transmission spectra for the whole duration of the magma ocean. An atmosphere of depth ~100 km is seen for pure water atmospheres. The effect of thermal dissociation on the effective height of the atmosphere is also shown. Due to the difference in the absorption behavior at different altitudes, the spectral features of H$_{2}$ and O$_{2}$ are seen at different altitudes of the atmosphere. Therefore, these species along with H$_{2}$O have a significant contribution to the transmission spectra and could be useful for placing observational constraints upon magma ocean exoplanets.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Understanding the evolution of Earth and potentially habitable Earth-like worlds is essential to fathom our origin in the Universe. The search for Earth-like planets in the habitable zone and investigation of their atmospheres with climate and photoc hemical models is a central focus in exoplanetary science. Taking the evolution of Earth as a reference for Earth-like planets, a central scientific goal is to understand what the interactions were between atmosphere, geology, and biology on early Earth. The Great Oxidation Event (GOE) in Earths history was certainly caused by their interplay, but the origin and controlling processes of this occurrence are not well understood, the study of which will require interdisciplinary, coupled models. In this work, we present results from our newly developed Coupled Atmosphere Biogeochemistry model in which atmospheric O$_2$ concentrations are fixed to values inferred by geological evidence. Applying a unique tool, ours is the first quantitative analysis of catalytic cycles that governed O$_2$ in early Earths atmosphere near the GOE. Complicated oxidation pathways play a key role in destroying O$_2$, whereas in the upper atmosphere, most O$_2$ is formed abiotically via CO$_2$ photolysis. The O$_2$ bistability found by Goldblatt et al. (2006) is not observed in our calculations likely due to our detailed CH$_4$ oxidation scheme. We calculate increased CH$_4$ with increasing O$_2$ during the GOE. For a given atmospheric surface flux, different atmospheric states are possible; however, the net primary productivity (NPP) of the biosphere that produces O$_2$ is unique. Mixing, CH$_4$ fluxes, ocean solubility, and mantle/crust properties strongly affect NPP and surface O$_2$ fluxes. Regarding exoplanets, different states of O$_2$ could exist for similar biomass output. Strong geological activity could lead to false negatives for life.
The early Earths environment is controversial. Climatic estimates range from hot to glacial, and inferred marine pH spans strongly alkaline to acidic. Better understanding of early climate and ocean chemistry would improve our knowledge of the origin of life and its coevolution with the environment. Here, we use a geological carbon cycle model with ocean chemistry to calculate self-consistent histories of climate and ocean pH. Our carbon cycle model includes an empirically justified temperature and pH dependence of seafloor weathering, allowing the relative importance of continental and seafloor weathering to be evaluated. We find that the Archean climate was likely temperate (0-50 {deg}C) due to the combined negative feedbacks of continental and seafloor weathering. Ocean pH evolves monotonically from 6.6 (+0.6,-0.4) (2{sigma}) at 4.0 Ga to 7.0 (+0.7,-0.5) (2{sigma}) at the Archean-Proterozoic boundary, and to 7.9 (+0.1,-0.2) (2{sigma}) at the Proterozoic-Phanerozoic boundary. This evolution is driven by the secular decline of pCO2, which in turn is a consequence of increasing solar luminosity, but is moderated by carbonate alkalinity delivered from continental and seafloor weathering. Archean seafloor weathering may have been a comparable carbon sink to continental weathering, but is less dominant than previously assumed, and would not have induced global glaciation. We show how these conclusions are robust to a wide range of scenarios for continental growth, internal heat flow evolution and outgassing history, greenhouse gas abundances, and changes in the biotic enhancement of weathering.
Earth-like planets orbiting M-dwarfs are prominent future targets when searching for life outside the solar system. We apply our newly developed Coupled Atmosphere Biogeochemistry model to investigate the coupling between the biosphere, geosphere and atmosphere to gain deeper insight into the atmospheric evolution of Earth-like planets orbiting M-dwarfs. Our main goal is to understand better atmospheric processes affecting biosignatures and climate on such worlds. Furthermore, this is the first study to our knowledge which applies an automated chemical pathway analysis quantifying the production and destruction pathways of O$_2$ for an Earth-like planet with an Archean O$_2$ abundance orbiting in the habitable zone of the M-dwarf AD Leo. Results suggest that the main production arises in the upper atmosphere from CO$_2$ photolysis followed by catalytic HO$_x$ reactions. The strongest destruction does not take place in the troposphere, as was the case in Gebauer et al. (2017) for an early-Earth analog planet around the Sun, but instead in the middle atmosphere where H$_2$O photolysis is the strongest. This result was driven by the strong Lyman-$alpha$-radiation output of AD Leo, which efficiently photolyzes H$_2$O. Results further suggest that early Earth-like atmospheres of planets orbiting an M-dwarf like AD Leo are in absolute terms less destructive for atmospheric O$_2$ than for early-Earth analog planets around the Sun despite higher concentrations of reduced gases such as e.g. H$_2$, CH$_4$ and CO. Hence the net primary productivity (NPP) required to produce the same amount of atmospheric O$_2$ at the surface is reduced. This implies that a possible Great Oxidation event, analogous to that on Earth, would have occurred earlier in time in analog atmospheres around M-dwarfs.
The emergence of life on the Earth has required a prior organic chemistry leading to the formation of prebiotic molecules. The origin and the evolution of the organic matter on the early Earth is not yet firmly understood. Several hypothesis, possibl y complementary, are considered. They can be divided in two categories: endogenous and exogenous sources. In this work we investigate the contribution of a specific endogenous source: the organic chemistry occurring in the ionosphere of the early Earth where the significant VUV contribution of the young Sun involved an efficient formation of reactive species. We address the issue whether this chemistry can lead to the formation of complex organic compounds with CO2 as only source of carbon in an early atmosphere made of N2, CO2 and H2, by mimicking experimentally this type of chemistry using a low pressure plasma reactor. By analyzing the gaseous phase composition, we strictly identified the formation of H2O, NH3, N2O and C2N2. The formation of a solid organic phase is also observed, confirming the possibility to trigger organic chemistry in the upper atmosphere of the early Earth. The identification of Nitrogen-bearing chemical functions in the solid highlights the possibility for an efficient ionospheric chemistry to provide prebiotic material on the early Earth.
The intrinsic luminosity of Uranus is a factor of 10 less than that of Neptune, an observation that standard giant planetary evolution models, which assume negligible viscosity, fail to capture. Here we show that more than half of the interior of Ura nus is likely to be in a solid state, and that thermal evolution models that account for this high viscosity region satisfy the observed faintness of Uranus by storing accretional heat deep in the interior. A frozen interior also explains the quality factor of Uranus required by the evolution of the orbits of its satellites.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا