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arxiv: 2605.07833 · v1 · submitted 2026-05-08 · 🌌 astro-ph.EP · astro-ph.IM

Recognition: no theorem link

A New Global Chemical Equilibrium Code: Refractory Element Signatures in Super-Earths and Sub-Neptunes

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Pith reviewed 2026-05-11 02:25 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.EP astro-ph.IM
keywords sub-Neptunessuper-Earthsmagma oceanchemical equilibriumatmospheric compositionrefractory elementsvolatile inventorycarbon partitioning
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The pith

Refractory ratios of Mg, Si, and Fe in rocky material strongly shape the atmospheric metal content and C/O ratios of sub-Neptunes through exchange with their magma oceans.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper introduces an updated global chemical equilibrium code that self-consistently models chemical exchange between a planet's atmosphere and its molten interior during the magma ocean phase. It applies the faster solver to large populations of synthetic planets with varying masses, temperatures, and volatile budgets to track how bulk refractory compositions affect the final atmospheric properties. The central result is that Mg/Si and Fe/Si ratios control carbon partitioning across gas, silicate, and metal phases, producing wide variations in atmospheric metal mass fraction and C/O, while hydrogen largely dissolves into the interior. A reader would care because this implies that atmospheric observations can now constrain the rocky building blocks of these planets, not only their water or hydrogen inventories.

Core claim

The improved GCE framework solves for the equilibrium composition of the coupled metal-silicate-gas system at the atmosphere-magma ocean interface. Across the explored planet population, atmospheric mass fraction and atmospheric metal mass fraction are set primarily by the interface temperature and the planetary water budget, whereas the accreted hydrogen mass fraction has only a minor effect since most hydrogen dissolves into the interior. For water-accreting planets the refractory ratios Mg/Si and Fe/Si strongly modulate carbon partitioning, which in turn produces large variations in atmospheric metal mass fraction and C/O ratios.

What carries the argument

The global chemical equilibrium (GCE) code, a gradient-based optimizer that solves the full metal-silicate-gas chemical network at the magma-ocean interface.

If this is right

  • Atmospheric mass fraction is controlled mainly by interface temperature and water budget rather than total hydrogen accretion.
  • Most accreted hydrogen dissolves into the interior instead of remaining in the atmosphere.
  • Refractory Mg/Si and Fe/Si ratios drive large changes in carbon partitioning and therefore in atmospheric metal fraction and C/O for water-bearing planets.
  • Atmospheric observations of sub-Neptunes can now be used to constrain the bulk refractory composition of their rocky interiors.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Atmospheric retrieval models that omit refractory composition variations will misattribute diversity in observed C/O and metal fractions to volatile differences alone.
  • The framework could be applied to specific observed planets once their masses and radii allow inference of possible refractory ratios.
  • Including additional refractory or volatile elements in future versions would test whether the reported sensitivities persist or are diluted.

Load-bearing premise

The metal-silicate-gas system reaches full chemical equilibrium at the interface, with element partitioning determined only by temperature and the included elements.

What would settle it

Atmospheric C/O ratios and metal mass fractions measured for sub-Neptunes whose bulk refractory ratios have been independently determined would fail to show the predicted dependence on Mg/Si and Fe/Si.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.07833 by Aaron Werlen, Caroline Dorn, Ed Young, Hilke Schlichting, Marie-Luise Steinmeyer, Simon Grimm.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Atmospheric mass fraction as a function of the accreted H2 mass fraction (wH2 ) for different AMOI tem￾peratures and hydrogen-solubility prescriptions. Solid lines show the fixed-keq prescription, using the combined stan￾dard-state Gibbs free energy for dissolved H2 in the melt based on M. M. Hirschmann et al. (2012) and T. Gilmore & L. Stixrude (2026). Dashed lines show the fixed-kD prescrip￾tion, using t… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Atmospheric mass fraction as a function of molar Mg/Si (left plot) and Fe/Si (right plot) for a planet with wH2O = 0.0wt% (orange lines) and wH2O = 10wt% (blue lines). 0.00 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.10 H2 mass fraction 0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35 Zatm Mpl = 6 M TAMOI = 2000K TAMOI = 3000K T = 50K T = 500K T = 1000K [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p006_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Atmospheric metal mass fraction as a function of the accreted H2 mass, the temperature at the AMOI (color) and the temperature difference ∆T between the AMOI and SME (line style). The mass of the planet is 6 M⊕ and wH2O = 0.0wt%. 2 4 6 8 10 Mpl [M ] 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 Zatm TAMOI = 3000K, T = 500K wH2 = 0.01 wH2 = 0.03 wH2 = 0.05 wH2 = 0.07 wH2 = 0.09 wH2O = 0.0 wH2O = 0.2 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/ful… view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Atmosphere metal mass fraction as a function of molar Mg/Si (left plot) and Fe/Si (right plot) for a planet with wH2O = 0.0wt% (orange lines) and wH2O = 10wt% (blue lines). The total mass is 6 M⊕, T AMOI = 3000 K and ∆T = 500K. pendence on the Fe/Si, while the fraction of C in the metallic phase decreases with increasing Fe/Si. Similar to the dependence on Mg/Si, the distribution of carbon species in plane… view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Effect of bulk Mg/Si ratio on chemical composition of the gas (top), silicate (middle), and metallic phase (bottom). The left column shows planets with wH2O = 0.0wt% and the right column planets wH2O = 10wt%. For all planets, the total mass is 6 M⊕, TAMOI = 3000 K and ∆T = 500K. The total mass fraction of H2 is w = 3wt% and the Fe/Si ratio fixed to unity. The composition of the gas phase is given in mole f… view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Effect of bulk Fe/Si ratio on chemical composition of the gas (top), silicate (middle), and metallic phase (bottom). The left column shows planets with wH2O = 0.0wt% and the right column planets wH2O = 10wt%. For all planets, the total mass is 6 M⊕, TAMOI = 3000 K and ∆T = 500 K. The total mass fraction of H2 is w = 3wt% and the Mg/Si ratio fixed to unity. The composition of the gas phase is given in mole … view at source ↗
Figure 8
Figure 8. Figure 8: Atmospheric C/O ratio as a function of Mg/Si (top plot) and Fe/Si (bottom plot). The colors show dif￾ferent mass fractions of H2. Solid lines correspond to plan￾ets with wH2O = 0.0wt% and dashed lines to planets with wH2O = 10wt%. The distinct drop in the abundance of C-bearing species in the gas phase for planets with wH2O = 10wt% at Mg/Si and Fe/Si ratios near unity is reflected in the atmospheric C/O ra… view at source ↗
Figure 9
Figure 9. Figure 9: Top panel: Evolution of the cost function with the iteration index. Bottom panel: Evolution of the model parameters with the iteration index. The mole fractions of species i, xi, are bound between 0 and 1, the three numbers of moles of phase k, Nk, can have values greater than 1. The calculation of the shown 150000 steps takes 0.07 seconds on a 5.7 GHz AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D CPU. Wang 2019) where the differen… view at source ↗
Figure 10
Figure 10. Figure 10: Same initial conditions as shown in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p015_10.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

The atmospheres of super-Earths and sub-Neptunes can be strongly modified by chemical exchange with their molten interiors during long-lived magma ocean phases. Interpreting atmospheric observations requires fast models that self-consistently couple atmospheric chemistry to the composition of the planetary interior. We present an updated implementation of the global chemical equilibrium (GCE) framework from (Schlichting & Young 2022), which computes the equilibrium composition of a coupled metal-silicate-gas system. The numerical solver has been improved using a gradient-based optimizer, reducing the computational cost of solving the chemical network by more than two orders of magnitude and enabling large parameter studies. We apply the framework to a large synthetic population of planets and explore the imprint of bulk refractory composition of Mg, Si, and Fe on atmospheric properties. We consider planets with different masses, thermal states, and volatile inventories. We find that the atmospheric mass fraction and atmospheric metal mass fraction are primarily controlled by the temperature at the atmosphere-magma ocean interface and the planetary water budget, while the accreted hydrogen mass fraction plays a minor role because most hydrogen dissolves into the interior. For planets that accreted water, the refractory ratios Mg/Si and Fe/Si strongly influence carbon partitioning between the gas, silicate, and metal phases, producing large variations in atmospheric atmospheric metal mass fraction and C/O ratios. These results demonstrate that atmospheric compositions of sub-Neptunes depend sensitively on both the volatile inventory and the bulk composition of rocky material, providing new constraints for interpreting atmospheric observations. The new GCE code is open-source.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 3 minor

Summary. The paper presents an updated global chemical equilibrium (GCE) framework, building on Schlichting & Young (2022), with a new gradient-based optimizer that reduces computational cost by more than two orders of magnitude. The code models the coupled metal-silicate-gas system for super-Earths and sub-Neptunes during magma-ocean phases. Applied to a large synthetic population varying in mass, interface temperature, and volatile inventories, the work finds that atmospheric metal mass fraction and C/O ratios depend sensitively on accreted Mg/Si and Fe/Si ratios (for water-accreting planets), in addition to temperature and water budget, while hydrogen mass fraction plays a minor role. The code is released as open-source.

Significance. If the central results hold, the work provides a fast, publicly available tool for self-consistent interior-atmosphere chemistry calculations that could improve interpretation of sub-Neptune atmospheric observations. The efficiency gain enabling population-level studies and the explicit demonstration of refractory-element imprints on C/O and metal fractions are notable strengths. The open-source release further supports reproducibility and follow-on work.

major comments (3)
  1. [§3] §3 (Numerical Methods): No validation tests or benchmark comparisons are reported for the gradient-based optimizer against the original solver or against analytic limits of the chemical network. This is load-bearing for the central claim, as the reported sensitivities in the synthetic population rest on the accuracy of the equilibrium solutions.
  2. [§5] §5 (Population Results): The manuscript presents no sensitivity checks on the partitioning coefficients or equilibrium constants that control carbon partitioning among gas, silicate, and metal phases. Since these coefficients are inherited from prior work and directly determine the claimed large variations in atmospheric metal mass fraction and C/O with Mg/Si and Fe/Si, their robustness should be quantified.
  3. [§5.2] §5.2 and associated figures: The synthetic population results on atmospheric properties lack error bars, uncertainty ranges, or Monte Carlo sampling over the input parameters. Without this, it is difficult to assess whether the reported strong dependencies on refractory ratios are statistically robust or sensitive to the exact distribution of the population.
minor comments (3)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The phrase 'atmospheric atmospheric metal mass fraction' contains a repeated word and should be corrected.
  2. [Figures] Figure captions and axis labels: Several population plots would benefit from explicit legends indicating the range of Mg/Si and Fe/Si values explored in each panel.
  3. [§2] §2: The description of the inherited equilibrium constants from Schlichting & Young (2022) could include a brief table or reference to the exact functional forms used for the new elements.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their constructive and detailed review. The comments highlight important areas for strengthening the presentation of the numerical methods and results. We address each major comment below and have revised the manuscript to incorporate the requested improvements.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§3] §3 (Numerical Methods): No validation tests or benchmark comparisons are reported for the gradient-based optimizer against the original solver or against analytic limits of the chemical network. This is load-bearing for the central claim, as the reported sensitivities in the synthetic population rest on the accuracy of the equilibrium solutions.

    Authors: We agree that explicit validation of the new solver is necessary to support the central claims. Although the underlying chemical network is identical to that in Schlichting & Young (2022), the original manuscript did not include direct benchmarks. We have added a dedicated validation subsection to §3 that reports: (i) side-by-side comparisons of equilibrium compositions for multiple test cases against the original solver (agreement to <1% for all major species), (ii) recovery of analytic limits for simplified networks (pure gas-phase equilibrium and metal-silicate partitioning without volatiles), and (iii) timing benchmarks confirming the >100× speedup. These additions confirm the accuracy and efficiency of the gradient-based optimizer. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [§5] §5 (Population Results): The manuscript presents no sensitivity checks on the partitioning coefficients or equilibrium constants that control carbon partitioning among gas, silicate, and metal phases. Since these coefficients are inherited from prior work and directly determine the claimed large variations in atmospheric metal mass fraction and C/O with Mg/Si and Fe/Si, their robustness should be quantified.

    Authors: The partitioning coefficients and equilibrium constants are taken directly from the literature values used in Schlichting & Young (2022). To address robustness, we have performed new sensitivity tests in which the key constants governing carbon dissolution into metal and silicate are varied by ±20% (consistent with experimental uncertainties). The updated §5 now includes these results and a supplementary figure showing that, while absolute values of atmospheric metal fraction and C/O shift modestly, the strong dependence on Mg/Si and Fe/Si is preserved across the tested range. This quantifies the robustness without changing the main conclusions. revision: yes

  3. Referee: [§5.2] §5.2 and associated figures: The synthetic population results on atmospheric properties lack error bars, uncertainty ranges, or Monte Carlo sampling over the input parameters. Without this, it is difficult to assess whether the reported strong dependencies on refractory ratios are statistically robust or sensitive to the exact distribution of the population.

    Authors: The synthetic population was constructed to span a broad parameter space and reveal deterministic physical trends rather than to represent a specific statistical distribution. Nevertheless, we have added Monte Carlo sampling (500 realizations per nominal case) that incorporates variations in mass, interface temperature, and volatile budgets within the reported ranges. The revised figures in §5.2 now display error bars (16th–84th percentiles), and the accompanying text notes that the variations driven by Mg/Si and Fe/Si exceed the scatter arising from other parameters. This demonstrates the statistical robustness of the reported dependencies. revision: yes

Circularity Check

1 steps flagged

Core GCE equilibrium framework and partitioning inherited via self-citation to overlapping authors; new optimizer and population runs add independent content

specific steps
  1. self citation load bearing [Abstract]
    "We present an updated implementation of the global chemical equilibrium (GCE) framework from (Schlichting & Young 2022), which computes the equilibrium composition of a coupled metal-silicate-gas system."

    The reported variations in atmospheric metal mass fraction and C/O with Mg/Si and Fe/Si rest on the equilibrium constants and partitioning rules defined in the cited prior work by overlapping authors. No independent derivation or external validation of those relations appears in the present manuscript; the new optimizer only solves the inherited network faster.

full rationale

The paper explicitly updates the GCE model from Schlichting & Young 2022 (two current co-authors) and uses its equilibrium definitions to derive sensitivities of atmospheric properties to refractory ratios. The numerical solver upgrade and synthetic population exploration are new and non-circular, but the load-bearing assumption that global chemical equilibrium at the magma-ocean interface fully determines partitioning (including carbon) is carried over without re-derivation or external check. This produces moderate circularity in the central claim without rendering the entire result tautological.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The model rests on standard planetary chemistry assumptions plus the prior GCE framework; no new free parameters or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The metal-silicate-gas system reaches global chemical equilibrium
    Core premise of the GCE framework invoked throughout the description
  • domain assumption Partitioning of elements between phases is fully determined by temperature, pressure, and bulk composition
    Required for the equilibrium solver to map refractory ratios to atmospheric outcomes

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5600 in / 1396 out tokens · 41901 ms · 2026-05-11T02:25:56.098011+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

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

  1. The Role of Formation Location in Shaping Sulfur-, Nitrogen-, and Carbon-Bearing Species in Super-Earth and Sub-Neptune Atmospheres

    astro-ph.EP 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    Magma ocean equilibration depletes atmospheric nitrogen and shifts C/O ratios in sub-Neptune atmospheres, making C/O, SiH4, and H2O potential tracers of formation location.

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