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Main Authors: Spaargaren, Rob J., Herbort, Oliver, Wang, Haiyang S., Mojzsis, Stephen J., Sossi, Paolo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.03724
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author Spaargaren, Rob J.
Herbort, Oliver
Wang, Haiyang S.
Mojzsis, Stephen J.
Sossi, Paolo
author_facet Spaargaren, Rob J.
Herbort, Oliver
Wang, Haiyang S.
Mojzsis, Stephen J.
Sossi, Paolo
contents The compositions of the Solar System terrestrial bodies are fractionated from that of the Sun, where elemental depletions in the bulk rocky bodies correlate with element volatility, expressed in its 50% condensation temperature. However, because element volatility depends on disk gas composition, it is not mandated that elemental fractionation trends derived from the solar-terrestrial scenario apply to other planetary systems. Here, we expand upon previous efforts to quantify element volatility during disk condensation, and how this affects rocky planet compositional diversity. We simulate condensation sequences for a sample of 1000 initial disk compositions based on observed stellar abundances. We present parametrisations of how element 50% condensation temperatures depend on disk composition, and apply element fractionation trends with appropriate element volatilty to stellar abundances to simulate compositions of rocky exoplanets with the same volatile depletion pattern as the Earth, providing a robust and conservative lower limit to the compositional diversity of rocky exoplanets. Here we show that Earth-like planets emerge from low-C-to-O disks and graphite-bearing planets from medium-to-high-C-to-O disks. Furthermore, we identify an intermediate-C-to-O class of planets characterized by Mg and Si depletion, leading to relatively high abundances of Fe, Ca, and Al. We show that devolatilisation patterns could be adapted potentially with disk composition-dependent condensation temperatures to make predictions of rocky planet bulk compositions within individual systems. The outcomes of our analysis suggest that accounting for disk composition-dependent condensation temperatures means that we can expect an even broader range of possible rocky planet compositions than has previously been considered.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2509_03724
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Proto-planetary disk composition-dependent element volatility in the context of rocky planet formation
Spaargaren, Rob J.
Herbort, Oliver
Wang, Haiyang S.
Mojzsis, Stephen J.
Sossi, Paolo
Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
The compositions of the Solar System terrestrial bodies are fractionated from that of the Sun, where elemental depletions in the bulk rocky bodies correlate with element volatility, expressed in its 50% condensation temperature. However, because element volatility depends on disk gas composition, it is not mandated that elemental fractionation trends derived from the solar-terrestrial scenario apply to other planetary systems. Here, we expand upon previous efforts to quantify element volatility during disk condensation, and how this affects rocky planet compositional diversity. We simulate condensation sequences for a sample of 1000 initial disk compositions based on observed stellar abundances. We present parametrisations of how element 50% condensation temperatures depend on disk composition, and apply element fractionation trends with appropriate element volatilty to stellar abundances to simulate compositions of rocky exoplanets with the same volatile depletion pattern as the Earth, providing a robust and conservative lower limit to the compositional diversity of rocky exoplanets. Here we show that Earth-like planets emerge from low-C-to-O disks and graphite-bearing planets from medium-to-high-C-to-O disks. Furthermore, we identify an intermediate-C-to-O class of planets characterized by Mg and Si depletion, leading to relatively high abundances of Fe, Ca, and Al. We show that devolatilisation patterns could be adapted potentially with disk composition-dependent condensation temperatures to make predictions of rocky planet bulk compositions within individual systems. The outcomes of our analysis suggest that accounting for disk composition-dependent condensation temperatures means that we can expect an even broader range of possible rocky planet compositions than has previously been considered.
title Proto-planetary disk composition-dependent element volatility in the context of rocky planet formation
topic Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.03724