论文标题
地球状行星的土地分数多样性及其对其可居住性的影响
Land Fraction Diversity on Earth-like Planets and Implications for their Habitability
论文作者
论文摘要
人们认为,海洋与陆地的平衡比率对于地球样生物圈至关重要,并且可以猜想地质特性中的板块构造行星应相似。毕竟,大陆壳的体积朝着生产和侵蚀之间的平衡发展。如果地球大小外行星的内部热状态与地球相似,那么人们可能会期望大陆生产和侵蚀之间具有相似的平衡,因此建立了类似的土地分数。我们将证明这种猜想不太可能是正确的。与耦合的地幔水相关的积极反馈 - 大陆壳周期可能会导致三个可能的行星的多种多样,具体取决于它们的早期历史:陆地行星,海洋行星和平衡的地球样星球。此外,大陆对内部的热覆盖增强了大陆生长对其历史以及最终对初始条件的敏感性。但是,大部分覆盖效应是通过放射性元件中的地幔耗竭来补偿的。长期碳酸盐 - 硅酸盐循环的模型显示,在平均表面温度下,土地和海洋行星在约5 k上不同。较大的大陆表面馏分既导致较高的风化速率和增强的吹气,部分互相补偿。尽管如此,与海洋星球相比,陆地行星预计将具有基本干燥,更寒冷的气候,寒冷的沙漠可能会延伸,并与当今的地球相比。使用大陆壳风化中的水可利用性和养分的模型,我们发现陆地和海洋行星的生物生产力和生物量可减少地球的三分之一至一半。这些行星上的生物圈可能不足以产生自由氧的供应。
A balanced ratio of ocean to land is believed to be essential for an Earth-like biosphere and one may conjecture that plate-tectonics planets should be similar in geological properties. After all, the volume of continental crust evolves towards an equilibrium between production and erosion. If the interior thermal states of Earth-sized exoplanets are similar to the Earth's, one might expect a similar equilibrium between continental production and erosion to establish and, hence, a similar land fraction. We will show that this conjecture is not likely to be true. Positive feedback associated with the coupled mantle water - continental crust cycle may rather lead to a manifold of three possible planets, depending on their early history: a land planet, an ocean planet and a balanced Earth-like planet. In addition, thermal blanketing of the interior by the continents enhances the sensitivity of continental growth to its history and, eventually, to initial conditions. Much of the blanketing effect is however compensated by mantle depletion in radioactive elements. A model of the long-term carbonate-silicate cycle shows the land and the ocean planet to differ by about 5 K in average surface temperature. A larger continental surface fraction results both in higher weathering rates and enhanced outgassing, partly compensating each other. Still, the land planet is expected to have a substantially dryer, colder and harsher climate possibly with extended cold deserts in comparison with the ocean planet and with the present-day Earth. Using a model of balancing water availability and nutrients from continental crust weathering, we find the bioproductivity and the biomass of both the land and ocean planet to be reduced by a third to half of Earth's. The biosphere on these planets might not be substantial enough to produce a supply of free oxygen.