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A cool runaway greenhouse without surface magma ocean

Authors :
Selsis, Franck
Leconte, Jérémy
Turbet, Martin
Chaverot, Guillaume
Bolmont, Émeline
Source :
Nature, volume 620, pages 287-291, 2023
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Water vapour atmospheres with content equivalent to the Earth's oceans, resulting from impacts or a high insolation, were found to yield a surface magma ocean. This was, however, a consequence of assuming a fully convective structure. Here we report, using a consistent climate model, that pure steam atmospheres are commonly shaped by radiative layers, making their thermal structure strongly dependent on the stellar spectrum and internal heat flow. The surface is cooler when an adiabatic profile is not imposed: melting Earth's crust requires an insolation several times higher than today, which will not happen during the main-sequence of the Sun. Venus' surface can solidify before the steam atmosphere escapes, which is opposite to previous works. Around the reddest stars ($T_{eff}<$3000K), surface magma oceans cannot form by stellar forcing alone, whatever the water content. These findings affect observable signatures of steam atmospheres and exoplanet mass-radius relationships, drastically changing current constraints on the water content of Trappist-1 planets. Unlike adiabatic structures, radiative-convective profiles are sensitive to opacities. New measurements of poorly constrained high-pressure opacities, in particular far from the H$_2$O absorption bands, are thus necessary to refine models of steam atmospheres, which are important stages in terrestrial planet evolution.<br />Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures in the main text, 6 figures and 1 table in the Methods. Published in Nature: 09 August 2023 (received 14 July 2022, accepted 24 May 2023)

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature, volume 620, pages 287-291, 2023
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2311.08444
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06258-3