论文标题
早期地球的宜居性:淡淡的年轻阳光下的液态水,由于较近的月亮而促成强烈的潮汐加热促进
Habitability of the early Earth: Liquid water under a faint young Sun facilitated by strong tidal heating due to a closer Moon
论文作者
论文摘要
地质证据表明,早在44亿年前,淡淡的年轻太阳只散发出其现代动力输出的70%,就早于地球表面附近的液态水。在这一点上,如果地球具有与现代地球相似的大气特性,那么它应该是全球滚雪球。极端的大气温室效应,最初是更大的阳光,在原型材料的吸积过程中获得的热量释放,以及早期地球材料的放射性作为储层或陷阱。就目前而言,淡淡的Young-sun悖论仍然是我们对地球生命起源的理解的重要问题。在这里,我们使用恒定的落叶潮汐理论来探索在太阳点火后大约6900万年形成的新出生的月亮,因此在哈迪斯(Hadean)以及可能的大将地球上产生了极端的潮汐摩擦(因此)。我们表明,Earth-moon系统损失了$ 3〜 \ times〜10^{31} $ J(占其初始机械能预算的99%)作为潮热。在1亿年的时间尺度上,通过表面加热大约10 W/m $^{ - 2} $,可能会导致地球早期的温度升高高达5摄氏度。仅这种加热效果并不能解决微弱的Young-sun悖论,但它可以与其他效果结合起来发挥关键作用。对潮汐加热的相互作用,太阳能输出的演变以及大气(温室)对地球早期的影响的未来研究可能有助于解决微弱的Young-sun悖论。
Geological evidence suggests liquid water near the Earth's surface as early as 4.4 billion years ago when the faint young Sun only radiated about 70% of its modern power output. At this point, the Earth should have been a global snowball if it possessed atmospheric properties similar to those of the modern Earth. An extreme atmospheric greenhouse effect, an initially more massive Sun, release of heat acquired during the accretion process of protoplanetary material, and radioactivity of the early Earth material have been proposed as reservoirs or traps for heat. For now, the faint-young-sun paradox persists as an important problem in our understanding of the origin of life on Earth. Here we use the constant-phase-lag tidal theory to explore the possibility that the new-born Moon, which formed about 69 million years after the ignition of the Sun, generated extreme tidal friction - and therefore heat - in the Hadean and possibly the Archean Earth. We show that the Earth-Moon system has lost about $3~ \times ~10^{31}$ J (99% of its initial mechanical energy budget) as tidal heat. Tidal heating of roughly 10 W/m$^{-2}$ through the surface on a time scale of 100 million years could have accounted for a temperature increase of up to 5 degrees Celsius on the early Earth. This heating effect alone does not solve the faint-young-sun paradox but it could have played a key role in combination with other effects. Future studies of the interplay of tidal heating, the evolution of the solar power output, and the atmospheric (greenhouse) effects on the early Earth could help in solving the faint-young-sun paradox.