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arxiv: 1510.07582 · v3 · pith:4SDN7QIUnew · submitted 2015-10-26 · 🌌 astro-ph.EP

Scaling the Earth: A Sensitivity Analysis of Terrestrial Exoplanetary Interior Models

classification 🌌 astro-ph.EP
keywords earthmodelsmass-radiusplanetradiusterrestrialapplycomposition
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An exoplanet's structure and composition are first-order controls of the planet's habitability. We explore which aspects of bulk terrestrial planet composition and interior structure affect the chief observables of an exoplanet: its mass and radius. We apply these perturbations to the Earth, the planet we know best. Using the mineral physics toolkit BurnMan to self-consistently calculate mass-radius models, we find that core radius, presence of light elements in the core and an upper-mantle consisting of low-pressure silicates have the largest effect on the final calculated mass at a given radius, none of which are included in current mass-radius models. We expand these results provide a self-consistent grid of compositionally as well as structurally constrained terrestrial mass-radius models for quantifying the likelihood of exoplanets being "Earth-like." We further apply this grid to Kepler-36b, finding that it is only ~20% likely to be structurally similar to the Earth with Si/Fe = 0.9 compared to Earth's Si/Fe = 1 and Sun's Si/Fe = 1.19.

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