An exploration of double diffusive convection in Jupiter as a result of hydrogen-helium phase separation

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Abstract

Jupiter's atmosphere has been observed to be depleted in helium (Yatm ~ 0.24), suggesting active helium sedimentation in the interior. This is accounted for in standard Jupiter structure and evolution models through the assumption of an outer, He-depleted envelope that is separated from the He-enriched deep interior by a sharp boundary. Here we aim to develop a model for Jupiter's inhomogeneous thermal evolution that relies on a more self-consistent description of the internal profiles of He abundance, temperature, and heat flux. We make use of recent numerical simulations on H/He demixing, and on layered double diffusive (LDD) and oscillatory double diffusive (ODD) convection, and assume an idealized planet model composed of an H/He envelope and a massive core. A general framework for the construction of interior models with He rain is described. Despite, or perhaps because of, our simplifications made we find that self-consistent models are rare. For instance, no model for ODD convection is found. We modify the H/He phase diagram of Lorenzen et al. to reproduce Jupiter's atmospheric helium abundance and examine evolution models as a function of the LDD layer height, from those that prolong Jupiter's cooling time to those that actually shorten it. Resulting models that meet the luminosity constraint have layer heights of ≈0.1-1 km, corresponding to ≈10 000- 20 000 layers in the rain zone between ~1 and 3-4.5Mbar. Present limitations and directions for future work are discussed, such as the formation and sinking of He droplets.

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Nettelmann, N., Fortney, J. J., Moore, K., & Mankovich, C. (2015). An exploration of double diffusive convection in Jupiter as a result of hydrogen-helium phase separation. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 447(4), 3422–3441. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stu2634

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