Sugata Tan

and 1 more

Though Venus’s atmospheric conditions and composition have been directly measured, the composition of the Venus lower atmosphere near the surface is generally still poorly known. It was extrapolated from observational data at other altitudes by assuming the constancy of elemental composition without condensation (Krasnopolsky 2007). Both in-situ measurement and remote-sensing observations reveals the most abundant components that exceed the mixing ratio of 10-4 to be CO2, N2, and SO2 (Bezard & de Bergh 2007, JGR 112, E04S07). Water and formation of photochemical H2SO4 — and condensation of cloud-forming H2SO4 — is only important at higher altitudes (Krasnopolsky 2012, Icarus 191, 25). In this work, the balancing of chemical-gravitational-thermal diffusive potentials for the ternary mixture of CO2, N2, and SO2, which represent the neutral Venusian lower atmosphere near the surface, is addressed to obtain the composition grading and to evaluate the tendency toward supercritical density-driven separation of CO2 and N2 (Lebonnois & Schubert 2017, Nat. Geosci. 10, 473). Even though dynamic atmospheric systems, including advective mixing, are more realistic, the static cases evaluated in this work provide stationary states where every dynamic process would eventually proceed to. Hence, our modeling is of a limiting case of the systems of interest, which could help explain some indications of compositional grading. The CRYOCHEM equation of state, which has been successfully applied in describing phase equilibria of Titan’s atmosphere and the surface liquid (Tan & Kargel 2018, Fluid Phase Equilib. 458, 153), as well as that involving solid phases on Pluto’s surface (Tan & Kargel 2018, MNRAS, 474, 4254), is used in this work on the supercritical Venus’s lower atmosphere. In the absence of direct measurement of composition of the lower atmosphere, as well as no lab evidence of CO2 and N2 separation under Venusian surface conditions (Lebonnois et al. 2020, Icarus 338, 113550), the results from this study may at least introduce some new concepts that would entail some tendency for molecular fractionation.

Sugata Tan

and 1 more

Solid-vapor phase equilibria describe the volatile ices on Pluto’s surface (Tan & Kargel 2018, MNRAS 474, 4254). A simple model of the atmosphere with three components N2/CH4/CO may have solved the long-standing puzzle of the existence of CH4-rich ice in addition to the expected N2-rich ice. An isobaric treatment using CRYOCHEM equation of state naturally results in one solid phase of either ice, which is in equilibrium with the atmosphere, depending on the local temperature variations of Pluto’s surface. CH4-rich ice forms at higher temperatures, while N2-rich ice forms at lower temperatures. A temperature also exists on Pluto where three phases coexist, including vapor in equilibrium with two ices, and where the ices can switch from one type to the other upon cooling or warming. Our model relies on fundamental physics-based thermodynamics, and it explains New Horizons observations of the distributions of these ices, as presented by Bertrand et al. (Nat. Commun. 2020, 11, 1), without invoking a vertically distributed atmospheric CH4 that has not been verified with observation. As observed by New Horizons, Pluto’s surface has valley networks and channels, perhaps resulting from either fluvial (Moore et al. 2016, Science 351, 1284) or glacial (Howard et al. 2017, Icarus 287, 287; Umurhan et al. 2017, Icarus 287, 301) mechanisms, or both, at the present or in the past. Considering the present freezing condition on the surface, if the mechanisms are still in action, they must occur under the surface. Therefore, it is of great interest to know the phase equilibria involving the ices and liquid at conditions that may exist underground. Similar to the treatment of the surface ices, this work also applies CRYOCHEM to describe the phase equilibria that progress through depth as the temperature and pressure increase. The fate of the ices can be determined by examining the resulting phase diagrams at conditions at different depths, specifically the appearance of a liquid phase.