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Origin and evolution of the atmospheres of early Venus,Earth and Mars
Authors:Helmut Lammer  Aubrey L Zerkle  Stefanie Gebauer  Nicola Tosi  Lena Noack  Manuel Scherf  Elke Pilat-Lohinger  Manuel Güdel  John Lee Grenfell  Mareike Godolt  Athanasia Nikolaou
Institution:1.Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences,Graz,Austria;2.School of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Centre for Exoplanet Science,University of St. Andrews,St. Andrews,UK;3.Department of Extrasolar Planets and Atmospheres,German Aerospace Center, Institute of Planetary Research,Berlin,Germany;4.Department of Planetary Physics,German Aerospace Center, Institute of Planetary Research,Berlin,Germany;5.Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics,Berlin Institute of Technology,Berlin,Germany;6.Department of Earth Sciences,Freie Universit?t Berlin,Berlin,Germany;7.Department of Astrophysics,University of Vienna,Vienna,Austria
Abstract:We review the origin and evolution of the atmospheres of Earth, Venus and Mars from the time when their accreting bodies were released from the protoplanetary disk a few million years after the origin of the Sun. If the accreting planetary cores reached masses \(\ge 0.5 M_\mathrm{Earth}\) before the gas in the disk disappeared, primordial atmospheres consisting mainly of H\(_2\) form around the young planetary body, contrary to late-stage planet formation, where terrestrial planets accrete material after the nebula phase of the disk. The differences between these two scenarios are explored by investigating non-radiogenic atmospheric noble gas isotope anomalies observed on the three terrestrial planets. The role of the young Sun’s more efficient EUV radiation and of the plasma environment into the escape of early atmospheres is also addressed. We discuss the catastrophic outgassing of volatiles and the formation and cooling of steam atmospheres after the solidification of magma oceans and we describe the geochemical evidence for additional delivery of volatile-rich chondritic materials during the main stages of terrestrial planet formation. The evolution scenario of early Earth is then compared with the atmospheric evolution of planets where no active plate tectonics emerged like on Venus and Mars. We look at the diversity between early Earth, Venus and Mars, which is found to be related to their differing geochemical, geodynamical and geophysical conditions, including plate tectonics, crust and mantle oxidation processes and their involvement in degassing processes of secondary \(\hbox {N}_2\) atmospheres. The buildup of atmospheric \(\hbox {N}_2\), \(\hbox {O}_2\), and the role of greenhouse gases such as \(\hbox {CO}_2\) and \(\hbox {CH}_4\) to counter the Faint Young Sun Paradox (FYSP), when the earliest life forms on Earth originated until the Great Oxidation Event \(\approx \) 2.3 Gyr ago, are addressed. This review concludes with a discussion on the implications of understanding Earth’s geophysical and related atmospheric evolution in relation to the discovery of potential habitable terrestrial exoplanets.
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