Department of Earth and Planetary Science, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.
Nature. 2013 May 30;497(7451):607-10. doi: 10.1038/nature12163.
Understanding the origins of the diversity in terrestrial planets is a fundamental goal in Earth and planetary sciences. In the Solar System, Venus has a similar size and bulk composition to those of Earth, but it lacks water. Because a richer variety of exoplanets is expected to be discovered, prediction of their atmospheres and surface environments requires a general framework for planetary evolution. Here we show that terrestrial planets can be divided into two distinct types on the basis of their evolutionary history during solidification from the initially hot molten state expected from the standard formation model. Even if, apart from their orbits, they were identical just after formation, the solidified planets can have different characteristics. A type I planet, which is formed beyond a certain critical distance from the host star, solidifies within several million years. If the planet acquires water during formation, most of this water is retained and forms the earliest oceans. In contrast, on a type II planet, which is formed inside the critical distance, a magma ocean can be sustained for longer, even with a larger initial amount of water. Its duration could be as long as 100 million years if the planet is formed together with a mass of water comparable to the total inventory of the modern Earth. Hydrodynamic escape desiccates type II planets during the slow solidification process. Although Earth is categorized as type I, it is not clear which type Venus is because its orbital distance is close to the critical distance. However, because the dryness of the surface and mantle predicted for type II planets is consistent with the characteristics of Venus, it may be representative of type II planets. Also, future observations may have a chance to detect not only terrestrial exoplanets covered with water ocean but also those covered with magma ocean around a young star.
了解陆地行星多样性的起源是地球和行星科学的一个基本目标。在太阳系中,金星的大小和体成分与地球相似,但它缺乏水。由于预计将发现更多种类的系外行星,因此需要一个行星演化的一般框架来预测它们的大气和表面环境。在这里,我们表明,根据从标准形成模型预期的初始熔融热态开始凝固的演化历史,陆地行星可以分为两种截然不同的类型。即使在形成后除了轨道之外完全相同,凝固的行星也可能具有不同的特征。一类行星,即形成于离宿主恒星一定临界距离之外的行星,在几百万年内凝固。如果行星在形成过程中获得水,那么大部分水将被保留下来,并形成最早的海洋。相比之下,在形成于临界距离内的二类行星上,即使初始水量较大,岩浆海洋也可以维持更长时间。如果与现代地球总库存相当的水量一起形成,其持续时间可能长达 1 亿年。在缓慢凝固过程中,流体动力学逃逸会使二类行星变干。尽管地球被归类为一类行星,但金星属于哪一类并不清楚,因为它的轨道距离接近临界距离。然而,由于预测的二类行星的表面和地幔干燥度与金星的特征一致,它可能代表二类行星。此外,未来的观测可能有机会不仅探测到覆盖着水海洋的类地系外行星,还探测到围绕年轻恒星的覆盖着岩浆海洋的系外行星。