pith. sign in

arxiv: 1810.12741 · v2 · pith:XCSKXGMWnew · submitted 2018-10-30 · 🌌 astro-ph.EP

The Volatility Trend of Protosolar and Terrestrial Elemental Abundances

classification 🌌 astro-ph.EP
keywords abundancesmathrmsolarelementsterrestrialalphabetadevolatilization
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

We present new estimates of protosolar elemental abundances based on an improved combination of solar photospheric abundances and CI chondritic abundances. These new estimates indicate CI chondrites and solar abundances are consistent for 60 elements. We compare our new protosolar abundances with our recent estimates of bulk Earth composition (normalized to aluminium), thereby quantifying the devolatilization in going from the solar nebula to the formation of the Earth. The quantification yields a linear trend $\log(f) = \alpha\log(T_C) + \beta$, where $f$ is the Earth-to-Sun abundance ratio and $T_C$ is the 50$\%$ condensation temperature of elements. The best fit coefficients are: $\alpha = 3.676\pm 0.142$ and $\beta = -11.556\pm 0.436$. The quantification of these parameters constrains models of devolatilization processes. For example, the coefficients $\alpha$ and $\beta$ determine a critical devolatilization temperature for the Earth $T_{\mathrm{D}}(\mathrm{E}) = 1391 \pm 15$ K. The terrestrial abundances of elements with $T_{C} < T_{\mathrm{D}}(\mathrm{E})$ are depleted compared with solar abundances, whereas the terrestrial abundances of elements with $T_{C} > T_{\mathrm{D}}(\mathrm{E})$ are indistinguishable from solar abundances. The terrestrial abundance of Hg ($T_C$ = 252 K) appears anomalously high under the assumption that solar and CI chondrite Hg abundances are identical. To resolve this anomaly, we propose that CI chondrites have been depleted in Hg relative to the Sun by a factor of $13\pm7$. We use the best-fit volatility trend to derive the fractional distribution of carbon and oxygen between volatile and refractory components ($f_\mathrm{vol}$, $f_\mathrm{ref}$). We find ($0.91\pm 0.08$, $0.09 \pm 0.08$) for carbon and ($0.80 \pm 0.04$, $0.20 \pm 0.04$) for oxygen.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. The chemical make-up of the Sun: A 2020 vision

    astro-ph.SR 2021-05 accept novelty 5.0

    Revised solar photospheric abundances yield Z/X = 0.0187 with C, N, O at 8.46, 7.83, 8.69, preserving the solar modeling discrepancy and revealing a modest volatile-refractory offset from CI chondrites.