High-Pressure Chemistry Linking Dry and Wet Planets

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

It has been believed that water-rich planets are formed outside the snow line. However, discovery of many close-in transiting sub-Neptune exoplanets, if at least some of them are water rich, challenges the notion. Therefore, sub-Neptunes have been believed to be large Earth-like planets with thick hydrogen rich atmosphere and hence dry. We have conducted a series of experiments under the pressure-temperature conditions expected at the boundary between hydrogen-rich atmosphere and rocky interior of a sub-Neptune at the GSECARS sector of Advanced Photon Source. Micro-second pulsed laser heating enables us to melt silicate in a hydrogen medium at high pressures. The reaction was monitored in situ using gated synchrotron X-ray diffraction. The recovered samples were analyzed with Raman spectroscopy and electron microscopy. We found reaction between hydrogen and magma which can unlock oxygen from silicate magma and enable oxygen to react with hydrogen to form water. The chemical reaction can convert a dry hydrogen-rich planet to a water-rich planet inside the snow line. H2/H2O ratio controls the degree of the conversion, explaining diverse mass-radius relations found among sub-Neptune exoplanets. We also found that high pressure promotes mixing between metal and hydrogen and mixing between oxide and water. Such mixing can result in a radial compositional gradient in the interiors of volatile-rich planets, which is different from well-differentiated layered interior structures of rocky planets. This dataset will advance our knowledge on atmosphere-interior interactions in large exoplanets, providing key data for understanding astrophysical measurements of their atmospheres.

*This work is supported by NSF-Astronomical Science (AST200567 and AST2108129) and NSF-Earth Science (EAR1921298). The work was also supported by the NASA-exoplanet program. The authors acknowledge the support of GeoSoilEnviroCARS (University of Chicago, Sector 13) for synchrotron experiments. GeoSoilEnviroCARS was supported by the National Science Foundation - Earth Sciences (EAR-1634415). This research used resources of the Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.

Publication: H. Allen-Sutter, V. Prakapenka, S. Chariton, S. Speziale, and S.-H. Shim. Reaction between hydrogen and ferrous/ferric oxides at high pressures and high temperatures – implications for sub-Neptunes and super-Earths. Planetary Science Journal, 2023, in press.

T. Kim, S. Chariton, V. Prakapenka, A. Pakhomova, H.-P. Liermann, Z. Liu, S. Speziale, S.-H. Shim, and Y. Lee. Atomic scale mixing between MgO and H2O in the deep interiors of water-rich planets. Nature Astronomy, DOI: 10.1038/s41550-021-01368-2

Presenters

  • Sang-Heon Shim

    • Arizona State University

Authors

  • Sang-Heon Shim

    • Arizona State University
  • Harrison W Horn

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Taehyun Kim

    • Arizona State University
  • Helene Piet

    • Arizona State University
  • Sergio Speziale

    • German Research Center for Geosciences
  • Yongjae Lee

    • Yonsei University
  • Stella Chariton

    • University of Chicago
  • Vitali Prakapenka

    • University of Chicago