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Magma ascent in planetesimals: control by grain size

Magma ascent in planetesimals: control by grain size
Magma ascent in planetesimals: control by grain size
Rocky planetesimals in the early solar system melted internally and evolved chemically due to radiogenic heating from 26Al. Here we quantify the parametric controls on magma genesis and transport using a coupled petrological and fluid mechanical model of reactive two-phase flow. We find the mean grain size of silicate minerals to be a key control on magma ascent. For grain sizes ≳1 mm, melt segregation produces distinct radial structure and chemical stratification. This stratification is most pronounced for bodies formed at around 1 Myr after formation of Ca, Al-rich inclusions. These findings suggest a link between the time and orbital location of planetesimal formation and their subsequent structural and chemical evolution. According to our models, the evolution of partially molten planetesimal interiors falls into two categories. In the magma ocean scenario, the whole interior of a planetesimal experiences nearly complete melting, which would result in turbulent convection and core–mantle differentiation by the rainfall mechanism. In the magma sill scenario, segregating melts gradually deplete the deep interior of the radiogenic heat source. In this case, magma may form melt-rich layers beneath a cool and stable lid, while core formation would proceed by percolation. Our findings suggest that grain sizes prevalent during the internal heating stage governed magma ascent in planetesimals. Regardless of whether evolution progresses toward a magma ocean or magma sill structure, our models predict that temperature inversions due to rapid 26Al redistribution are limited to bodies formed earlier than ≈1 Myr after CAIs. We find that if grain size was ≲1 mm during peak internal melting, only elevated solid–melt density contrasts (such as found for the reducing conditions in enstatite chondrite compositions) would allow substantial melt segregation to occur.
0012-821X
154-165
Lichtenberg, Tim
ffb32a31-f6c2-4be4-8afa-405f657b1d82
Keller, Tobias
d8dfcfa5-89d1-4203-aa2d-8c142c00a169
Katz, Richard F.
01d7145d-41ad-44eb-9671-ac78313e82c2
Golabek, Gregor J.
39326924-b812-4005-b6d2-4fcd1b0a429c
Gerya, Taras V.
8afcb1d9-9da5-4600-9c31-c0fe02428b42
et al.
Lichtenberg, Tim
ffb32a31-f6c2-4be4-8afa-405f657b1d82
Keller, Tobias
d8dfcfa5-89d1-4203-aa2d-8c142c00a169
Katz, Richard F.
01d7145d-41ad-44eb-9671-ac78313e82c2
Golabek, Gregor J.
39326924-b812-4005-b6d2-4fcd1b0a429c
Gerya, Taras V.
8afcb1d9-9da5-4600-9c31-c0fe02428b42

Lichtenberg, Tim, Keller, Tobias and Katz, Richard F. , et al. (2018) Magma ascent in planetesimals: control by grain size. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 507, 154-165. (doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2018.11.034).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Rocky planetesimals in the early solar system melted internally and evolved chemically due to radiogenic heating from 26Al. Here we quantify the parametric controls on magma genesis and transport using a coupled petrological and fluid mechanical model of reactive two-phase flow. We find the mean grain size of silicate minerals to be a key control on magma ascent. For grain sizes ≳1 mm, melt segregation produces distinct radial structure and chemical stratification. This stratification is most pronounced for bodies formed at around 1 Myr after formation of Ca, Al-rich inclusions. These findings suggest a link between the time and orbital location of planetesimal formation and their subsequent structural and chemical evolution. According to our models, the evolution of partially molten planetesimal interiors falls into two categories. In the magma ocean scenario, the whole interior of a planetesimal experiences nearly complete melting, which would result in turbulent convection and core–mantle differentiation by the rainfall mechanism. In the magma sill scenario, segregating melts gradually deplete the deep interior of the radiogenic heat source. In this case, magma may form melt-rich layers beneath a cool and stable lid, while core formation would proceed by percolation. Our findings suggest that grain sizes prevalent during the internal heating stage governed magma ascent in planetesimals. Regardless of whether evolution progresses toward a magma ocean or magma sill structure, our models predict that temperature inversions due to rapid 26Al redistribution are limited to bodies formed earlier than ≈1 Myr after CAIs. We find that if grain size was ≲1 mm during peak internal melting, only elevated solid–melt density contrasts (such as found for the reducing conditions in enstatite chondrite compositions) would allow substantial melt segregation to occur.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 November 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 December 2018
Published date: 14 December 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488371
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488371
ISSN: 0012-821X
PURE UUID: 2d8b0c32-14ca-49ba-aeb9-71244c1a4b38
ORCID for Tobias Keller: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6121-5377

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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2024 17:32
Last modified: 22 Mar 2024 03:09

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Contributors

Author: Tim Lichtenberg
Author: Tobias Keller ORCID iD
Author: Richard F. Katz
Author: Gregor J. Golabek
Author: Taras V. Gerya
Corporate Author: et al.

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