Geophysical and geochemical controls on abiotic carbon cycling on
Earth-like planets
Abstract
We investigate how variations in a planet’s size and the chemical
(mineral) composition of its upper mantle and surface affect processes
involved in the carbonate-silicate cycle, which is thought to have
regulated the composition of Earth’s atmosphere and its surface
temperature over geologic time. We present models of geophysical and
geochemical controls on these processes: outgassing, continental
weathering, and seafloor weathering, and analyze sensitivities to planet
size and composition. For Earth-like compositions, outgassing is
maximized for planets of Earth’s size. Smaller planets convect less
vigorously; higher pressures inside larger planets hinder melting. For
more felsic mantles, smaller planets (0.5-0.75 Earth mass) outgas more,
whereas more mafic planets follow the size trend of Earth’s composition.
Planet size and composition can affect outgassing by two orders of
magnitude, with variability driven by mass in the first 2.5 Gyr after
formation and by composition past that time. In contrast, simulations
spanning the diversity of surface compositions encountered in the inner
solar system indicate that continental weathering fluxes are about as
sensitive to surface composition or the patchiness of land as they are
to surface temperature, with fluxes within a factor of five of Earth’s.
Seafloor weathering appears more sensitive to uncertainties in tectonic
regime (occurrence, speed, and size of plates) than to seafloor
composition. These results form a basis to interpret calculations of
geological surface carbon fluxes to track atmospheric compositions,
through time, of lifeless exo-Earths, providing a baseline against which
the effect of biological activity may be distinguished with telescopic
observations.