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Experimental evidence for a phase transition in magnesium oxide at exoplanet pressures
Magnesium oxide is an important component of the Earthâs mantle and has been extensively studied at pressures and temperatures relevant to Earth1. However, much less is known about the behaviour of this oxide under conditions likely to occur in extrasolar planets with masses up to 10 times that of Earth, termed super-Earths, where pressures can exceed 1,000âGPa (10 million atmospheres). Magnesium oxide is expected to change from a rocksalt crystal structure (B1) to a caesium chloride (B2) structure at pressures of about 400â600âGPa (refs 2, 3). Whereas no structural transformation was observed in static compression experiments up to 250âGPa (ref. 4), evidence for a solidâsolid phase transition was obtained in shockwave experiments above 400âGPa and 9,000âK (ref. 5), albeit no structural measurements were made. As a result, the properties and the structure of MgO under conditions relevant to super-Earths and large planets are unknown. Here we present dynamic X-ray diffraction measurements of ramp-compressed magnesium oxide. We show that a solidâsolid phase transition, consistent with a transformation to the B2 structure, occurs near 600âGPa. On further compression, this structure remains stable to 900âGPa. Our results provide an experimental benchmark to the equations of state and transition pressure of magnesium oxide, and may help constrain mantle viscosity and convection in the deep mantle of extrasolar super-Earths