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Injection of meteoric phosphorus into planetary atmospheres

  • Juan Diego Carrillo-Sánchez
  • , David L. Bones
  • , Kevin M. Douglas
  • , George J. Flynn
  • , Sue Wirick
  • , Bruce Fegley
  • , Tohru Araki
  • , Burkhard Kaulich
  • , John M.C. Plane
  • University of Leeds
  • Focused Beam Enterprises
  • Washington University St. Louis
  • Diamond Light Source

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study explores the delivery of phosphorus to the upper atmospheres of Earth, Mars, and Venus via the ablation of cosmic dust particles. Micron-size meteoritic particles were flash heated to temperatures as high as 2900 ​K in a Meteor Ablation Simulator (MASI), and the ablation of PO and Ca recorded simultaneously by laser induced fluorescence. Apatite grains were also ablated as a reference. The speciation of P in anhydrous chondritic porous Interplanetary Dust Particles was made by K-edge X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy, demonstrating that P mainly occurs in phosphate-like domains. A thermodynamic model of P in a silicate melt was then developed for inclusion in the Leeds Chemical Ablation Model (CABMOD). A Regular Solution model used to describe the distribution of P between molten stainless steel and a multicomponent slag is shown to provide the most accurate solution for a chondritic-composition, and reproduces satisfactorily the PO ablation profiles observed in the MASI. Meteoritic P is moderately volatile and ablates before refractory metals such as Ca; its ablation efficiency in the upper atmosphere is similar to Ni and Fe. The speciation of evaporated P depends significantly on the oxygen fugacity, and P should mainly be injected into planetary upper atmospheres as PO2, which will then likely undergo dissociation to PO (and possibly P) through hyperthermal collisions with air molecules. The global P ablation rates are estimated to be 0.017 ​t ​d−1 (tonnes per Earth day), 1.15 ​× ​10−3 ​t ​d−1 and 0.024 ​t ​d−1 for Earth, Mars and Venus, respectively.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104926
JournalPlanetary and Space Science
Volume187
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2020

Keywords

  • Ablation
  • Cosmic dust
  • Phosphorus thermodynamics
  • Planetary atmospheres
  • Zodiacal cloud

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