Articolo in rivista, 2021, ENG, 10.1073/pnas.2101155118

Potassium isotope composition of Mars reveals a mechanism of planetary volatile retention

Tian, Zhen; Magna, Tomá?; Day, James M.D.; Mezger, Klaus; Scherer, Erik E.; Lodders, Katharina; Hin, Remco C.; Koefoed, Piers; Bloom, Hannah; Wang, Kun

McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences; Czech Geological Survey, Prague; Scripps Institution of Oceanography; University of Bristol; University of Bern; Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster

The abundances of water and highly to moderately volatile elements in planets are considered critical to mantle convection, surface evolution processes, and habitability. From the first flyby space probes to the more recent "Perseverance" and "Tianwen-1" missions, "follow the water," and, more broadly, "volatiles," has been one of the key themes of martian exploration. Ratios of volatiles relative to refractory elements (e.g., K/Th, Rb/Sr) are consistent with a higher volatile content for Mars than for Earth, despite the contrasting present-day surface conditions of those bodies. This study presents K isotope data from a spectrum of martian lithologies as an isotopic tracer for comparing the inventories of highly and moderately volatile elements and compounds of planetary bodies. Here, we show that meteorites from Mars have systematically heavier K isotopic compositions than the bulk silicate Earth, implying a greater loss of K from Mars than from Earth. The average "bulk silicate" ?41K values of Earth, Moon, Mars, and the asteroid 4-Vesta correlate with surface gravity, the Mn/Na "volatility" ratio, and most notably, bulk planet H2O abundance. These relationships indicate that planetary volatile abundances result from variable volatile loss during accretionary growth in which larger mass bodies preferentially retain volatile elements over lower mass objects. There is likely a threshold on the size requirements of rocky (exo) planets to retain enough H2O to enable habitability and plate tectonics, with mass exceeding that of Mars.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 118 (39)

Keywords

K isotope, Mars, Parent body size, Volatile depletion

CNR authors

Hin Remco Christiaan

CNR institutes

IGAG – Istituto di geologia ambientale e geoingegneria

ID: 490677

Year: 2021

Type: Articolo in rivista

Creation: 2023-12-27 10:19:42.000

Last update: 2024-01-26 15:20:47.000

External IDs

CNR OAI-PMH: oai:it.cnr:prodotti:490677

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2101155118

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85115306605