Search results for "Tidal locking"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Diving into exoplanets: Are water seas the most common?

2019

One of the basic tenets of exobiology is the need for a liquid substratum in which life can arise, evolve, and develop. The most common version of this idea involves the necessity of water to act as such a substratum, both because that is the case on Earth and because it seems to be the most viable liquid for chemical reactions that lead to life. Other liquid media that could harbor life, however, have occasionally been put forth. In this work, we investigate the relative probability of finding superficial seas on rocky worlds that could be composed of nine different, potentially abundant, liquids, including water. We study the phase space size of habitable zones defined for those substance…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesExtraterrestrial EnvironmentMilky WayOrigin of LifePlanets01 natural sciencesAstrobiologyAbundance (ecology)Planet0103 physical sciencesExobiology010303 astronomy & astrophysicsEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesProbabilityExoseasModels StatisticalHabitable zoneExoplanetsLead (sea ice)WaterAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)ExoplanetTidal lockingSpace and Planetary ScienceSolventsAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary AstrophysicsRelative probabilityCircumstellar habitable zoneGeology
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Hot Super-Earths with Hydrogen Atmospheres: A Model Explaining Their Paradoxical Existence

2019

In this paper we propose a new mechanism that could explain the survival of hydrogen atmospheres on some hot super-Earths. We argue that on close-orbiting tidally-locked super-Earths the tidal forces with the orbital and rotational centrifugal forces can partially confine the atmosphere on the nightside. Assuming a super terran body with an atmosphere dominated by volcanic species and a large hydrogen component, the heavier molecules can be shown to be confined within latitudes of $\lesssim 80^{\circ}$ whilst the volatile hydrogen is not. Because of this disparity the hydrogen has to slowly diffuse out into the dayside where XUV irradiation destroys it. For this mechanism to take effect it …

PhysicsEarth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHydrogenOrder (ring theory)chemistry.chemical_elementFOS: Physical sciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsAstrophysics01 natural sciencesExoplanetTidal lockingAtmospherechemistrySpace and Planetary ScienceExtreme ultraviolet0103 physical sciencesTidal forceAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics010303 astronomy & astrophysicsAstrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesThe Astrophysical Journal
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