1 / 42

Forming Planetary Crusts II

Forming Planetary Crusts II. Forming Planetary Crusts I Tour of planetary surfaces Terrestrial planet formation Differentiation and timing constraints  Forming Planetary Crusts II Giant impacts and the end of accretion Magma oceans and primary crust formation KREEP

nika
Download Presentation

Forming Planetary Crusts II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Forming Planetary Crusts II

  2. Forming Planetary Crusts I • Tour of planetary surfaces • Terrestrial planet formation • Differentiation and timing constraints •  Forming Planetary Crusts II • Giant impacts and the end of accretion • Magma oceans and primary crust formation • KREEP • Late veneers and terrestrial planet water •  Forming Planetary Crusts III • One-plate planets vs. plate tectonics • Recycling crust • Plate tectonic changes over the Hadean and Archean

  3. Kleine et al., 2009 • The first few 107 years to 108 years • T0 = 4568.2 ± 0.6 Myr formation of the CAIs • Rapid formation of planetesimals < 1Myr • Intense Al26 heating • Melting and differentiation into iron meteorite parent bodies • Formation of Chondrules and Chrondrites a few Myr later • No differentiation due to lower 26Al levels • Vesta-like bodies formed with volcanic activity in progress • Gas disk dissipates ~10Myr • Mars in ~10 Myr • Silicate differentiation ~40 Myr • Earth in ~30-100Myr • Ends with the moon-forming impact, 50-150Myr • At 163Myr Earth has a solid surface (zircons) • Next phase (~50 Myr) involves giant impacts – the leading theory for… • Stripping of Mercury’s silicate mantle • Formation of Earth’s moon • Formation of Mars topographic dichotomy Chambers et al., 2009

  4. Overview of a rocky planet • Starts as homogeneous mix of rock & iron • Molten state allows differentiation • Iron core cools and solidifies (not yet complete for the Earth) Millions of years Billions of years ~12,800 km

  5. Planets start hot • Gravitational potential energy of accreting mass • Minimum energy delivered as velocity might be more than the escape velocity • Integrate over the planets radius to get total energy delivered • Convert this energy to a temperature rise: • Ignore cooling for now • ΔT for the Earth is very large >>> melting temperature • ΔT ~ melting temperature means R~1000 km • Objects bigger than large asteroids melt during accretion • Differentiation also releases gravitational potential energy • Amount depends on core/mantle density contrast and size of core • Typically enough to melt the body • Hf/W isotopes show differentiation essentially contemporaneous with accretion Spread over the planet’s surface increasing radius by ΔR

  6. Final phase • High relative velocities • Low gravitational focusing • An inefficient process • Takes ~ 100Myr • Gas has disappeared now • Jupiter and Saturn are fully formed • Heavily affects outcome in the asteroid belt • Determines what regions contribute the terrestrial planet material • Final number, masses and positions of terrestrial planets are essentially random.

  7. Three possible impacts giant impacts to consider… • Formation of an iron-rich Mercury • Formation of Earth’s Moon • Mars Crustal dichotomy

  8. Mercury’s Abnormal Interior • Mercury’s uncompressed density (5.3 g cm-3) is much higher than any other terrestrial planet. • For a fully differentiated core and mantle • Core radius ~75% of the planet • Core mass ~60% of the planet • Larger values are possible if the core is not pure iron • 3 possibilities • Differences in aerodynamic drag between metal and silicate particles in the solar nebula. • Differentiation and then boil-off of a silicate mantle from strong disk heating and vapor removal by the solar wind. • Differentiation followed by a giant impact which can strip away most of the mantle.

  9. Basic story • Mercury forms and differentiates • Proto mercury is 2.25 times the mass of the current planet • Impactor is ~1/6 of the mass • Fast, head-on, collision needed to strip off mantle material • In contrast to slow oblique collisions at Earth and Mars • Head on collisions are less likely

  10. Impact timescale • A few hours to reform the iron rich Mercury • Magma ocean certain • Mercury must avoid re-accreting debris • Half-life of debris is ~2 Myr • Poynting-Robertson drag • Dynamical models suggest Mercury can reaccumulate some small fraction of its old silicate material • No samples means no constraints Benz et al., 2007

  11. Formation of the Moon • Facts to consider • Moon depleted in iron & volatile substances • Bulk Earth 30% iron (mostly core) • Bulk Moon 8-10% iron (mostly in mantle FeO) • Oxygen isotope ratios similar to Earth • Moon doesn’t orbit in Earth’s equatorial plane • Orbital solutions show that original inclination was close to 10 degrees • Angular momentum of Earth-Moon system is anomalously high • Corresponds to spinning an isolated Earth in 4 hrs • Geochemical evidence for magma ocean • Floating anorthosite • Uniform age of highland material – more on this later

  12. Possible theories (that didn’t work) • Earth and Moon co-accreted • Explains oxygen isotopes • Doesn’t explain iron and volatile depletion • Earth split into two pieces • Spinning so fast that it broke apart (fission) • …but the Moon doesn’t orbit in Earth’s equatorial plane • …and present day angular momentum isn’t high enough • Capture of passing body • Earth captures an independently formed moon as it passes nearby • Pretty much a dynamical miracle (Very hard to dissipate enough energy to capture) • Doesn’t explain oxygen isotope similarity to Earth • Current paradigm is Giant impact • Earth close to final size • Mars-sized impactor • Both bodies already differentiated • Both bodies formed at ~1 AU

  13. Free parameters • Late vs Early (mass of proto-Earth) • Early accretion poses compositional problem • Mass ratio • ~9:1 for late accretion • ~Mars-sized impactor • Impact parameter • Controls angular momentum of final system • Values 0.7-0.8 Rearth work best • Most probable impact angle is 45° (b~0.707Rearth) • Approach velocity • Minimum is escape velocity • Best results for v/vesc ~ 1.1 Canup, 2004 b

  14. Canup, 2004

  15. Canup, 2004

  16. Isotopic ratios may have equilibrated through vapor cloud Canup, 2004

  17. Most material in the lunar disk comes from the impacting body • Yellows/greens • Isotopic ratios shouldn’t match without re-equilibration • Temperature of material that goes into the moon is coolest • Still several 1000K • Enough to remove volatile elements and water • Cores of bodies merge • In the Earth Canup, 2004

  18. Disks are 1.5-2 lunar masses • Formation of a lunar sized body is possible in months • Tidal forces > self-gravity when inside the Roche limit • ~2.9 Rearth for lunar density material • Optimum place to form moon is just outside this limit where disk is thickest • Conservation of angular momentum • Moon ~15x times closer • Earth’s rotation ~3.9x faster (~6 hours) • Tides have removed some of this angular momentum • Moon drifts outwards • From disk interaction • From terrestrial tides aR ~ 2.9 Rearth Tk ~ 7 hours Kokubo et al., 2000

  19. Timeline constraints? • Hf/W put the impact at >50Myr after CAIs • Anorthosite Sm/Nd 112 ± 40 Myr formation of lunar crust • Norman et al. 2003 • KREEP (Zircon Pb/Pb) 150 Myr • Nemchin et al. 2009 • Whole moon Rb/Sr 90 ± 20 Myr • Halliday 2008 • Earths magma ocean gone by 163Myr • Zircons again

  20. Mars: Crustal Dichotomy • Northern and southern hemispheres of Mars are very distinct: • North • Low elevation • Few Craters – Young • Smooth terrain • Thin Crust • No Magnetized rock • South • High elevation • Heavily cratered – Old • Rough terrain • Thick crust • Magnetized rock • Dichotomy boundary mostly follows a great circle, but is interrupted by Tharsis • No gravity signal associated with the dichotomy boundary - compensated • Theories on how to form a dichotomy: • Giant impact • Several large basins • Degree 1 convection cell • Early plate tectonics Zuber et al., 2000

  21. Despite all this the difference is only skin deep • Buried impact basins in the northern hemisphere have been mapped • Before this burial the northern and southern hemispheres were indistinguishable in age • Rules out Earth-style plate tectonics • Northern hemisphere is a thinly covered version of the southern hemisphere • Mantled by 1-2 km of material (sediments and volcanic flows) Frey et al., 200?

  22. Borealis basin • 208E, 67N • 4250-5300 km in radius • Shares slope break with at ~1.5 basin radii with other basins • Largest impact structure in the solar system Andrews-Hanna et al., 2008

  23. Marinova et al., 2008 Nimmo et al., 2008 • Hydrocode modeling of a vertical and oblique impacts • 3x1029 J impact, 6-10 kms-1 at 30-60° • No global melting – melt layer 10s of km thick within basin • Northern crust extracted from already depleted mantle • May correspond to Shergottites formed from a depleted reservoir 100Myr after most SNCs

  24. Giant Impacts make Magma Oceans • Lunar magma ocean was probably at least a few hundred km thick • Apollo 11 returned highland fragments, first suggestion of Magma ocean • Idea since extended to other terrestrial planets • A melt has a bulk chemical composition, but no crystals • Minerals are mechanically separable crystals with a distinct composition • Terrestrial planets are dominated by silicon-oxygen based minerals – silicates • Silicate rocks are built from SiO4 tetrahedra

  25. Depending on how Oxygen is shared • Olivine • Isolated tetrahedra joined by cations (Mg, Fe) • (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 (forsterite, fayalite) • Pyroxene • Chains of tetrahedra sharing 2 Oxygen atoms • (Mg, Fe)SiO3 (orthopyroxenes) • (Ca, Mg, Fe) SiO3 (clinopyroxenes) • Feldspars • Framework where all 4 oxygen atoms are shared

  26. What happens when you cool a melt? • Bowens reaction series • Minerals begin to condense out in a certain order • Dense minerals sink e.g. Olivine (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 • Buoyant minerals rise e.g. Anorthite Ca Al2Si2O8 • ‘Undesirable’ elements get more concentrated in remaining liquid • Potassium (K), Rare Earth Elements (REE), Phosphorus (P) • The reverse happens when you melt a solid • More on that in the volcanism lectures

  27. Lunar Case • Original planetary crusts from silicate differentiation • Calcium-rich plagioclase feldspar (anorthosite) • Floats in an anhydrous melt – moon, mercury? • Sinks in a hydrated melt – Earth, Mars, Venus • Unstable at high pressures – so sinking anorthosite is doomed • Olivine and Pyroxene • Sinks in shallow magma ocean • Undesirables form KREEP layer • Non-uniformly distributed • Earth/Venus/Mars • Olivine rains out • Remaining composition is called Basaltic • Basalt is a broad term (to be expounded upon in the volcanism lectures!) • Variations in water content • Variations in alkali metal content • Variations in silica content • These are initial crusts that will be heavily modified by: • Stripping by Giant Impacts • Plate Tectonics • Volcanism

  28. Ultrabasic Primative Acidic Evolved Basic Fe poor Light Less-dense Fe rich Dark Dense

  29. End result is a chemically distinct skin of rock called a crust • 10s of km thick • Density ~3000 kg m-3 • Two main consequences of crustal formation • Mantles depleted • Upper mantle is more Olivine rich • Crusts enriched in isotopes • The ‘undesirables’ are concentrated in the crust • Radiogenic isotopes (heat sources ) mostly in the crust Mantle rocks Average

  30. The Moon has the ‘predicted’ anorthosite crust • Some resurfaced by later basaltic flows • Unexplained: • crustal thickness variation • Non-uniform KREEP distribution • Mercury should have lost any original anorthosite crust in its giant impact • Messenger indicates lower Ca/Si and Al/Si than the lunar highlands • …but abundant volatile species are a problem to explain • Very low Fe and Ti abundances 3.8 Ga 3.1 Ga Nittler et al., 2011

  31. Venus rock composition • Sampled in only 7 locations by Soviet landers • Composition consistent with low-silica basalt • Exposed crust is <1 Gyr old though Venera 14

  32. Earth’s crust is continuously recycled by plate tectonics and so we don’t see any original crust • But we can see production of basaltic crust ongoing today • Characteristic stratigraphic sequence: • Gabbro • (large grained basalt) • Sheeted dikes • Each sheet was the wall of the inner ridge • Pillow basalts • Blobs of basalt that are quickly quenched • Ocean sediments • Fine-grained muds • Called an ophiolite sequence • Can be obducted onto a continental setting • Isua supracrustal belt – southern Greenland • 3.8 Ga

  33. Martian in-situ and orbital measurements • Crust dominated by basalt • With a thin weathered coating McSween et al., 2009

  34. Marinova et al., 2008 Nimmo et al., 2008 • Hydrocode modeling of a vertical and oblique impacts • 3x1029 J impact, 6-10 kms-1 at 30-60° • No global melting – melt layer 10s of km thick within basin • Northern crust extracted from already depleted mantle • May correspond to Shergottites formed from a depleted reservoir 100Myr after most SNCs

  35. In decreasing order of severity… • Mercury – head-on, high velocity, collision • Total planetary disruption • Earth – grazing, low velocity, collision • Forms very large Moon • Global magma oceans on both bodies • Mars – grazing, low velocity, collision • Forms hemispheric dichotomy • A baby magma ocean, no large moon • Vesta • Distorted shape of object • Ejected crustal and mantle samples to Earth • Giant impacts may have had other roles • Formation of Pluto’s moons • Rotation of Venus

  36. Explaining Earth’s water is a problem • Best done with Jupiter and Saturn on circular orbits • Explaining a small Mars is a problem • Best done with Jupiter and Saturn on eccentric orbits, e ~ 0.1 • Inconsistent with Nice model for later giant planet migration Raymond et al., 2009

  37. Earth’s water • 1 Earth ocean ~ 1.4 x 1021 Kg • Estimates of Earth’s water content of ~5 oceans, about 0.1% MEarth • Inner nebula was too hot to allow water or hydrous minerals • Possible Sources • Adsorbed on dust grains at 1 AU • Comets • Asteroids (either ice or as hydrated minerals) • Constraints • D/H of Earth’s water • Late veneer of highly siderophile elements • Moon is (mostly) dry • Surface water after moon-formation

  38. D/H rules out comets • But only 3 Oort cloud comets have been measured • Condensed near Jupiter’s current position • Bulk comet might be different than its coma • Jupiter family comets might have a different D/H • Condensed in Kuiper belt • Mars D/H matches comets • Lack of crustal recycling? • Asteroids match Earth’s D/H • Only Carbonaceous Chondrites have significant water • But addition of these asteroids would produce the wrong Os isotopes • Earth has a late veneer of highly siderophile elements (added post differentiation) • At ~0.003 of CI abundances (but in CI ratios) • Ordinary chondrites are an isotopic match • Requires a ~1% MEarth addition after the moon forms • But late veneer and water delivery could come from different sources Drake, 2005

  39. Adsorbed onto dust grains? • Simulated adsorption onto forsterite grains shows a few oceans can be stored in this way • …but, not all adsorption sites would contain water (e.g. competition from H2) • Ordinary chondrites are not hydrated… Muralidharan et al., 2008

More Related