论文标题
海底风化对行星宜居性的影响
The Effect of Seafloor Weathering on Planetary Habitability
论文作者
论文摘要
通常,一个可居住的行星是可以在其表面上支撑液态水的行星。可居住性取决于温度,该温度主要是由于二氧化碳和水蒸气而设置的,这是由温度和温室效应所设定的。二氧化碳水平通过火山过气增加,并通过大陆和海底风化而降低。在这里,我使用包含两种风化类型的全球平均气候模型来检查类似地球行星的气候演化。气候对大陆和海底风化的相对贡献敏感,即使总体风化速率是固定的。气候也很大程度上取决于海底风化对二氧化碳部分压力的依赖性。这两个因素都是不确定的。类似地球的行星具有两个平衡的气候状态:(i)一种无冰状的状态,在这种状态下,两种风化类型都平衡了气味,(ii)一个被冰覆盖的状态,在该状态下,单独使用海底风化的冰层平衡。其中第二个以前尚未详细探讨。对于某些行星,国家都不存在,以及冰覆盖和无冰状态之间的气候周期。对于其他某些行星,都存在两个平衡,气候取决于初始条件。由于出色的演变,暴力随着时间的推移会增加,因此行星通常首先遇到冰覆盖的平衡。即使随后出现无冰状状态,这种行星也将保持冰覆盖,除非气候受到较大的扰动。冰覆盖的平衡状态覆盖了类似地球的行星的相位空间的很大一部分。因此,许多分配给恒星宜居区的行星可能因此无法居住。
Conventionally, a habitable planet is one that can support liquid water on its surface. Habitability depends on temperature, which is set by insolation and the greenhouse effect, due mainly to CO2 and water vapor. The CO2 level is increased by volcanic outgassing, and decreased by continental and seafloor weathering. Here, I examine the climate evolution of Earth-like planets using a globally averaged climate model that includes both weathering types. Climate is sensitive to the relative contributions of continental and seafloor weathering, even when the total weathering rate is fixed. Climate also depends strongly on the dependence of seafloor weathering on CO2 partial pressure. Both these factors are uncertain. Earth-like planets have two equilibrium climate states: (i) an ice-free state where outgassing is balanced by both weathering types, and (ii) an ice-covered state where outgassing is balanced by seafloor weathering alone. The second of these has not been explored in detail before. For some planets, neither state exists, and the climate cycles between ice-covered and ice-free states. For some other planets, both equilibria exist, and the climate depends on the initial conditions. Insolation increases over time due to stellar evolution, so a planet usually encounters the ice-covered equilibrium first. Such a planet will remain ice-covered, even if the ice-free state appears subsequently, unless the climate receives a large perturbation. The ice-covered equilibrium state covers a large fraction of phase space for Earth-like planets. Many planets conventionally assigned to a star's habitable zone may be rendered uninhabitable as a result.