Knowledge (XXG)

Core–mantle differentiation

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the timescale of such redistribution in comparison to the timescale of iron-silicate differentiation remains uncertain. Once both rock and metal are melted, separation easily takes place driven by density contrast. Models suggest that melting could have occurred as soon as a planet radius becomes ~ 2000 to 3000 km. Likewise, some models predict occurrence of magma oceans at depths down to 300 km. The lower mantle may have never been completely melted because its melting temperature rises at a rate of 1 Kelvin/km. It still remains uncertain whether a single stage long-lasting magma ocean took place, or rather several episodes of rapid-cooling magma oceans during periodic impact events. Experiments suggest that viscosity of the magma ocean was low, thereby implying turbulent convective flow that rapidly dissipates heat. If true, the magma ocean can only have existed for a few thousands years.
20: 28: 63:. Planetesimals contained iron and silicates either already differentiated or mixed together. Either way, after impacting the Proto-Earth their materials very likely became homogenized. At this stage, the Proto-Earth was probably the size of Mars. Next followed the separation and stratification of the Proto-Earth's constituents, chiefly driven by their density contrasts. Factors such as pressure, temperature, and impact bodies in the primordial magma ocean were involved in the differentiation process. 126:. However, notwithstanding the fact that the mantle underlying the magma ocean is not brittle, according to some studies it is possible that the difference in viscosity between the iron ponds and the mantle was enough to allow the formation of dikes rather than diapirs. For today's conditions, iron diking has been devised as a viable strategy to send a probe to study the Earth's interior. 87:
between melt and crystals to be less than 60 degrees to maintain connectivity. However, measurements at the surface suggest that the dihedral angle is frequently greater than 60 degrees, thereby limiting the occurrence of percolation, although it is uncertain whether it may be less than 60 degrees in
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Under the assumption of a solid mantle and melted iron mixture, the percolation mechanism involves metal flowing along solid mantle crystal grain boundaries towards the center of the Earth. This hypothesis assumes that rocky materials remain solid or soft, while iron is molten. The surface tension of
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The differentiation process is driven by the higher density of iron compared to silicate rocks, but the lower melting point of the former constitutes an important factor. In fact, once iron has melted, differentiation can take place whether silicate rocks are completely melted or not. On the premises
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Energy release during the impact of large bodies could have partially or totally melted the Earth producing a magma ocean, conceivably more than once during the Earth's formation. Even if initial melting surrounds only the impact area, isostatic equilibrium would globally re-distribute magma, albeit
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One plausible scenario is that the primordial, cold silicate core fragmented in response to instabilities induced by the denser surrounding iron layer. At the end, chunks of such a fragmented core ("rockbergs") migrated upward and incorporated into the mantle, whereas the iron alloy settled at the
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Temperature models predict melting of the disseminated iron alloy while silicate rocks soften at the upper level. The heat source is radioactive decay. Liquid iron migrated downward to levels where cooler temperatures kept silicates solidified, forming an iron layer on top of an undifferentiated
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Iron droplets in the magma ocean existed in a variety of sizes depending on the size of the bodies impacting the Earth. In molten state large bodies tend to break, whereas small bodies tend to coalesce. The equilibrium is found by the Weber number that provides a mean to calculate the stabilized
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Rather than the iron aggregations proposed by Elsasser, this model proposes that the iron shell melted at the boundary with the primordial core, and permeated through the latter in liquid state instead of aggregating into iron bulbs as proposed in the Safronov's model. The primordial core would
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Large iron blobs cannot be dragged by convective forces in the primordial mantle, therefore they do not have enough time to hydrodynamically equilibrate and reach the stabilized size. Hence, they deposit at a rheological boundary (such as present day
92:, which would be expected had percolation dominated there. Another argument against percolation as a dominant mechanism of iron migration is that it requires temperature to stay within a narrow margin, above the iron solidus but below rock solidus. 31:
Alternative model for core-mantle differentiation: I. Melted iron layer between protomantle and primordial core. II. Primordial core cracking. III. Primordial core fragments. IV. Rockbergs ascend and iron forms new core. After Stevenson
71:. They can be summarized into three mechanisms: 1) Percolation of iron alloy through silicate crystals; 2) Separation of metal from rock in a primordial magma ocean; 3) Migration of iron diapirs or dikes through the mantle. 601: 122:
boundary), forming iron ponds. Eventually, ponded iron would sink into the comparatively less dense silicates underneath them. The mechanism is thought to resemble
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diameter of the liquid iron droplets, which corresponds to 10 cm. After iron droplets form they segregate from the surrounding silicates and precipitate in a "
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of these plausible scenarios, several models have been proposed to account for the core-mantle differentiation following the stage of nebular formation of the
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iron drops cannot be physically larger than the dragging exerted by the comparatively more viscous mantle, hence limiting the size of the iron droplets.
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material core, and below the primordial mantle in which impact-induced convection flow develops. From this stage on, iron aggregations triggered by
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ascend in grain-size bodies until incorporating into the mantle. The time-scale for the core formation is of the order of billion years.
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The percolation hypothesis assumes that crystals in the mantle have no preferred orientation. Likewise, percolation requires the
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Sharkov, E. V. (2015). "The Problem of Evolution of the Earth's Core: Geological, Petrological, and Paleomagnetic Evidence".
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Hypothetical core-mantle differentiation processes: Percolation, diking, and diapirism. After Rubie et al. (2015).
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Karato, Shun-ichiro (1997). "Core formation and chemical equilibrium in the Earth - I. Physical considerations".
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instabilities migrated through the primordial core in a long-term process (hundreds of million of years).
55:. According to the Safronov's model, protoplanets formed as the result of collisions of smaller bodies ( 520: 458: 371: 315: 285: 238: 89: 544: 331: 262: 60: 203: 162:
center of the Earth. This process would take place faster than the two models mentioned above.
536: 405: 254: 48: 47:) that results in the separation of iron-rich materials that eventually would conform a metal 528: 493: 466: 379: 323: 246: 52: 524: 462: 375: 319: 289: 242: 106: 84: 383: 595: 335: 44: 266: 548: 497: 68: 56: 250: 282:
Evolution of the protoplanetary cloud and formation of the Earth and the planets
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Stevenson, David J. (2003). "Mission to Earth's core - a modest proposal".
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Separation of materials resulting in a distinct planetary mantle and core
59:), which previously condensed from solid debris present in the original 470: 449:
Tonks, W. Brian (1993). "Magma ocean formation due to giant impacts".
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Vityazev, A. V. (1976). "Model of the early evolution of the Earth".
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Izvestiya, Academy of Sciences, USSR. Physics of the Solid Earth
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the lower mantle. Traces of iron have not been observed in the
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Rubin, Allan M. (1995). "Propagation of magma-filled cracks".
284:. Israel Program for Scientific Translations. p. 182. 229:
Stevenson, D. J. (1981). "Models of the Earth's core".
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Elsasser, W. M. (1963). "Early history of the Earth".
404:. Oxford University Press , New York. pp. 87–88. 39:is the set of processes that took place during the 436:The early Earth: Accretion and differentiation 486:Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 8: 364:Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 43:of Earth's evolution (or more generally, of 602:Events in the geological history of Earth 438:. American Geophysical Union. p. 86. 130:Other core-mantle differentiation models 170: 198: 196: 194: 7: 429: 427: 425: 423: 421: 395: 393: 357: 355: 353: 351: 349: 347: 345: 301: 299: 224: 222: 220: 218: 216: 192: 190: 188: 186: 184: 182: 180: 178: 176: 174: 14: 451:Journal of Geophysical Research 498:10.1146/annurev.earth.23.1.287 1: 564:Earth Science and Meteoritics 384:10.1016/s0031-9201(96)03232-3 251:10.1126/science.214.4521.611 204:"Formation of Earth's Core" 148:Vityazev and Mayeva's model 37:Core–mantle differentiation 628: 400:Stevenson, D. J. (1990). 328:10.1134/S1028334X15050220 120:lithosphere-asthenosphere 280:Safronov, V. S. (1972). 51:, surrounded by a rocky 607:Structure of the Earth 308:Doklady Earth Sciences 33: 24: 434:Badro, James (2015). 156: 147: 134: 30: 22: 113:Diapirism and diking 525:2003Natur.423..239S 463:1993JGR....98.5319T 402:Origin of the earth 376:1997PEPI..100...61K 320:2015DokES.462..533S 290:1972epcf.book.....S 243:1981Sci...214..611S 34: 25: 612:Planetary geology 519:(6937): 239–240. 471:10.1029/92je02726 457:(E3): 5319–5333. 237:(4521): 611–619. 157:Stevenson's model 619: 587: 586: 574: 568: 567: 559: 553: 552: 508: 502: 501: 481: 475: 474: 446: 440: 439: 431: 416: 415: 397: 388: 387: 359: 340: 339: 303: 294: 293: 277: 271: 270: 226: 211: 210: 208: 200: 135:Elsasser's model 627: 626: 622: 621: 620: 618: 617: 616: 592: 591: 590: 576: 575: 571: 561: 560: 556: 533:10.1038/423239a 510: 509: 505: 483: 482: 478: 448: 447: 443: 433: 432: 419: 412: 399: 398: 391: 361: 360: 343: 305: 304: 297: 279: 278: 274: 228: 227: 214: 206: 202: 201: 172: 168: 159: 150: 142:Rayleigh-Taylor 137: 132: 115: 98: 77: 41:accretion stage 17: 12: 11: 5: 625: 623: 615: 614: 609: 604: 594: 593: 589: 588: 569: 554: 503: 476: 441: 417: 410: 389: 370:(1–4): 61–79. 341: 314:(1): 346–351. 295: 272: 212: 169: 167: 164: 158: 155: 149: 146: 136: 133: 131: 128: 114: 111: 97: 94: 85:dihedral angle 76: 73: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 624: 613: 610: 608: 605: 603: 600: 599: 597: 584: 580: 573: 570: 565: 558: 555: 550: 546: 542: 538: 534: 530: 526: 522: 518: 514: 507: 504: 499: 495: 491: 487: 480: 477: 472: 468: 464: 460: 456: 452: 445: 442: 437: 430: 428: 426: 424: 422: 418: 413: 411:9780195066197 407: 403: 396: 394: 390: 385: 381: 377: 373: 369: 365: 358: 356: 354: 352: 350: 348: 346: 342: 337: 333: 329: 325: 321: 317: 313: 309: 302: 300: 296: 291: 287: 283: 276: 273: 268: 264: 260: 256: 252: 248: 244: 240: 236: 232: 225: 223: 221: 219: 217: 213: 205: 199: 197: 195: 193: 191: 189: 187: 185: 183: 181: 179: 177: 175: 171: 165: 163: 154: 145: 143: 129: 127: 125: 121: 112: 110: 108: 102: 95: 93: 91: 86: 81: 74: 72: 70: 64: 62: 58: 57:planetesimals 54: 50: 46: 45:rocky planets 42: 38: 29: 21: 582: 578: 572: 563: 557: 516: 512: 506: 489: 485: 479: 454: 450: 444: 435: 401: 367: 363: 311: 307: 281: 275: 234: 230: 160: 151: 138: 124:salt diapirs 116: 103: 99: 90:upper mantle 82: 78: 69:Solar System 65: 36: 35: 492:: 287–336. 96:Magma ocean 75:Percolation 596:Categories 166:References 336:129980418 541:12748631 267:24671489 259:17839632 585:: 3–12. 566:: 1–30. 549:4430744 521:Bibcode 459:Bibcode 372:Bibcode 316:Bibcode 286:Bibcode 239:Bibcode 231:Science 32:(1981). 547:  539:  513:Nature 408:  334:  265:  257:  61:nebula 53:mantle 545:S2CID 332:S2CID 263:S2CID 207:(PDF) 537:PMID 406:ISBN 255:PMID 107:rain 49:core 529:doi 517:423 494:doi 467:doi 380:doi 368:100 324:doi 312:462 247:doi 235:214 109:". 598:: 581:. 543:. 535:. 527:. 515:. 490:23 488:. 465:. 455:98 453:. 420:^ 392:^ 378:. 366:. 344:^ 330:. 322:. 310:. 298:^ 261:. 253:. 245:. 233:. 215:^ 173:^ 583:2 551:. 531:: 523:: 500:. 496:: 473:. 469:: 461:: 414:. 386:. 382:: 374:: 338:. 326:: 318:: 292:. 288:: 269:. 249:: 241:: 209:.

Index



accretion stage
rocky planets
core
mantle
planetesimals
nebula
Solar System
dihedral angle
upper mantle
rain
lithosphere-asthenosphere
salt diapirs
Rayleigh-Taylor













"Formation of Earth's Core"

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