Title of article :
Compositions of Mercuryʹs earliest crust from magma ocean models
Author/Authors :
Brown، نويسنده , , Stephanie M. and Elkins-Tanton، نويسنده , , Linda T.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
10
From page :
446
To page :
455
Abstract :
The size of the Mercurian core and the low ferrous iron bearing silicate content of its crust offer constraints on formation models for the planet. Here we consider a bulk composition that allows endogenous formation of the planetʹs large core, and by processing the mantle through a magma ocean, would produce a low-iron oxide crust consistent with observations. More Earth-like bulk compositions require silicate removal, perhaps by a giant impact, to create the planetʹs large core fraction. We find that the endogenous model can produce a large core with either a plagioclase flotation crust or a low-iron oxide magmatic crust. Because a magma ocean creates a gradient in iron oxide content in the resulting planetary mantle, the parts of the mantle removed by a putative giant impact could result in either a high-iron oxide mantle in contradiction to current crustal measurements, or a low-iron oxide mantle consistent with the current understanding of Mercury. If a giant impact cannot preferentially remove shallow mantle material then the proto-Mercury must have had a bulk low iron-oxide composition. Thus a specific bulk composition is required to make Mercury endogenously, and either a specific process or a specific composition is required to make it exogenously through giant impact. Measurements taken by the MESSENGER mission, when compared to predictions given here, may help resolve Mercuryʹs formation process.
Keywords :
Magma ocean , Crustal composition , CORE , mercury , Giant impact
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number :
2327741
Link To Document :
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