77 research outputs found

    The extreme physical properties of the CoRoT-7b super-Earth

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    International audienceâ–ș Here, we discuss the extreme physical properties possible for the first characterized rocky super-Earth, CoRoT-7b ( = 1.58 , = 5.7 ). â–ș We make the working hypothesis that the planet is rocky with no volatiles in its atmosphere, and derive the physical properties that result. â–ș The dayside is very hot (2500 K at the sub-stellar point) while the nightside is very cold (∌ 50 K). The sub-stellar point is as hot as the tungsten filament of an incandescent bulb, resulting in the melting and distillation of silicate rocks and the formation of a lava ocean. â–ș These possible features of CoRoT-7b should be common to many small and hot planets, including Kepler-10b. They define a new class of objects that we propose to name ''Lava-ocean planets''

    The History, Relevance, and Applications of the Periodic System in Geochemistry

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    Geochemistry is a discipline in the earth sciences concerned with understanding the chemistry of the Earth and what that chemistry tells us about the processes that control the formation and evolution of Earth materials and the planet itself. The periodic table and the periodic system, as developed by Mendeleev and others in the nineteenth century, are as important in geochemistry as in other areas of chemistry. In fact, systemisation of the myriad of observations that geochemists make is perhaps even more important in this branch of chemistry, given the huge variability in the nature of Earth materials – from the Fe-rich core, through the silicate-dominated mantle and crust, to the volatile-rich ocean and atmosphere. This systemisation started in the eighteenth century, when geochemistry did not yet exist as a separate pursuit in itself. Mineralogy, one of the disciplines that eventually became geochemistry, was central to the discovery of the elements, and nineteenth-century mineralogists played a key role in this endeavour. Early “geochemists” continued this systemisation effort into the twentieth century, particularly highlighted in the career of V.M. Goldschmidt. The focus of the modern discipline of geochemistry has moved well beyond classification, in order to invert the information held in the properties of elements across the periodic table and their distribution across Earth and planetary materials, to learn about the physicochemical processes that shaped the Earth and other planets, on all scales. We illustrate this approach with key examples, those rooted in the patterns inherent in the periodic law as well as those that exploit concepts that only became familiar after Mendeleev, such as stable and radiogenic isotopes

    Vortex Shedding behind a Tapered Cylinder and Its Control

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    K-40-Ar-40 constraints on recycling continental crust into the mantle

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    Extraction of potassium into magmas and outgassing of argon during melting constrain the relative amounts of potassium in the crust with respect to those of argon in the atmosphere. No more than 30% of the modern mass of the continents was subducted back into the mantle during Earth's history. It is estimated that 50 to 70% of the subducted sediments are reincorporated into the deep continental crust. A consequence of the limited exchange between the continental crust and the upper mantle is that the chemistry of the upper mantle is driven by exchange of material with the deep mantle

    Mass-independent isotope fractionation of molybdenum and ruthenium and the origin of isotopic anomalies in Murchison

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    Dauphas et al.'s model for the nucleosynthetic origin of Mo and Ru anomalies in meteorites leaves the case of Murchison (CM2) unexplained.We explore the possibility that such a discrepancy is due to mass-independent effects controlled by nuclear field shift with, in particular, ‘‘staggering'' between odd and even masses.We first demonstrate the existence of such mass-independent fractionation of Mo and Ru isotopes by chemical exchange of Mo and Ru between DC18C6 crown ether and aqueous solutions. Our results fit the nuclear field shift theory of Bigeleisen. We then review the correlation between the mean-square charge radius (which controls the nuclear field shift) and the isotopic anomalies found in an Allende CAI and in Murchison. AlthoughMo and Ru in the Allende CAI show a clear indication of nucleosynthetic components, the mass-independent anomalies observed in Murchison show a strong correlation with the nuclear charge distribution. We therefore argue that some isotopic anomalies observed in meteorites may be due to nuclear field shift rather than nucleosynthetic processes. Such effects are temperature dependent and may represent either genuine nebular processes or analytical artifacts. This new interpretation may help assess the existence of anomalies due to the extinct isotopes 97Tc and 98Tc

    Isotope fractionation of iron(III) in chemical exchange reactions using solvent extraction with crown ether

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    International audienceThis work reports on the chemical isotope fractionation of Fe(III) by a solvent extraction method with a crown ether of dicyclohexano-18-crown-6. The 56Fe/54Fe and 57Fe/54Fe ratios were analyzed by multiple-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. We determined the dependence of the isotope enrichment factors () on the strength of HCl. The relative deviation of the 56Fe/54Fe ratios relative to the unprocessed material (104 56) increases from -15.3 to -6.3 with [HCl] increasing from 1.6 to 3.5 mol/L. Likewise, 104 57 increases from -22.8 to -9.6 under the same conditions. The correlation between 56 and 57 is mass dependent within the errors. The observed fractionation was broken down into the effects of competing extraction reactions and of a reaction between Fe(III) species (FeCl2+ and FeCl3) in the aqueous phase. We found that the isotope fractionation between the Fe(III) species is mass dependent, which we confirmed by calculating the reduced partition function ratios
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