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Key Atmospheric Signatures for Identifying the Source Reservoirs of Volatiles in Uranus and Neptune

Mousis, O. ; Aguichine, A. ; Atkinson, D. H. ; Atreya, S. K. ; Cavalié, T. ; Lunine, J. I. ; Mandt, K. E. and Ronnet, T. LU (2020) In Space Science Reviews 216(5).
Abstract

We investigate the enrichment patterns of several delivery scenarios of the volatiles to the atmospheres of ice giants, having in mind that the only well constrained determination made remotely, namely the carbon abundance measurement, suggests that their envelopes possess highly supersolar metallicities, i.e., close to two orders of magnitude above that of the protosolar nebula. In the framework of the core accretion model, only the delivery of volatiles in solid forms (amorphous ice, clathrates, pure condensates) to these planets can account for the apparent supersolar metallicity of their envelopes. In contrast, because of the inward drift of icy particles through various snowlines, all mechanisms invoking the delivery of volatiles... (More)

We investigate the enrichment patterns of several delivery scenarios of the volatiles to the atmospheres of ice giants, having in mind that the only well constrained determination made remotely, namely the carbon abundance measurement, suggests that their envelopes possess highly supersolar metallicities, i.e., close to two orders of magnitude above that of the protosolar nebula. In the framework of the core accretion model, only the delivery of volatiles in solid forms (amorphous ice, clathrates, pure condensates) to these planets can account for the apparent supersolar metallicity of their envelopes. In contrast, because of the inward drift of icy particles through various snowlines, all mechanisms invoking the delivery of volatiles in vapor forms predict subsolar abundances in the envelopes of Uranus and Neptune. Alternatively, even if the disk instability mechanism remains questionable in our solar system, it might be consistent with the supersolar metallicities observed in Uranus and Neptune, assuming the two planets suffered subsequent erosion of their H-He envelopes. The enrichment patterns derived for each delivery scenario considered should be useful to interpret future in situ measurements by atmospheric entry probes.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Atmospheric probes, Formation models, In situ measurements, Neptune, Uranus
in
Space Science Reviews
volume
216
issue
5
article number
77
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • scopus:85079420666
ISSN
0038-6308
DOI
10.1007/s11214-020-00681-y
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fecab7cf-0fc9-44b6-a775-497a5af35299
date added to LUP
2020-12-18 13:07:59
date last changed
2024-04-03 19:14:33
@article{fecab7cf-0fc9-44b6-a775-497a5af35299,
  abstract     = {{<p>We investigate the enrichment patterns of several delivery scenarios of the volatiles to the atmospheres of ice giants, having in mind that the only well constrained determination made remotely, namely the carbon abundance measurement, suggests that their envelopes possess highly supersolar metallicities, i.e., close to two orders of magnitude above that of the protosolar nebula. In the framework of the core accretion model, only the delivery of volatiles in solid forms (amorphous ice, clathrates, pure condensates) to these planets can account for the apparent supersolar metallicity of their envelopes. In contrast, because of the inward drift of icy particles through various snowlines, all mechanisms invoking the delivery of volatiles in vapor forms predict subsolar abundances in the envelopes of Uranus and Neptune. Alternatively, even if the disk instability mechanism remains questionable in our solar system, it might be consistent with the supersolar metallicities observed in Uranus and Neptune, assuming the two planets suffered subsequent erosion of their H-He envelopes. The enrichment patterns derived for each delivery scenario considered should be useful to interpret future in situ measurements by atmospheric entry probes.</p>}},
  author       = {{Mousis, O. and Aguichine, A. and Atkinson, D. H. and Atreya, S. K. and Cavalié, T. and Lunine, J. I. and Mandt, K. E. and Ronnet, T.}},
  issn         = {{0038-6308}},
  keywords     = {{Atmospheric probes; Formation models; In situ measurements; Neptune; Uranus}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{5}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Space Science Reviews}},
  title        = {{Key Atmospheric Signatures for Identifying the Source Reservoirs of Volatiles in Uranus and Neptune}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11214-020-00681-y}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s11214-020-00681-y}},
  volume       = {{216}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}