Vlada Stamenković
German Aerospace Center
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Featured researches published by Vlada Stamenković.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
Vlada Stamenković; Lena Noack; Doris Breuer; Tilman Spohn
We study the thermal evolution of super-Earths with a one-dimensional (1D) parameterized convection model that has been adopted to account for a strong pressure dependence of the viscosity. A comparison with a 2D spherical convection model shows that the derived parameterization satisfactorily represents the main characteristics of the thermal evolution of massive rocky planets. We find that the pressure dependence of the viscosity strongly influences the thermal evolution of super-Earths—resulting in a highly sluggish convection regime in the lower mantles of those planets. Depending on the effective activation volume and for cooler initial conditions, we observe with growing planetary mass even the formation of a conductive lid above the core-mantle boundary (CMB), a so-called CMB-lid. For initially molten planets our results suggest no CMB-lids but instead a hot lower mantle and core as well as sluggish lower mantle convection. This implies that the initial interior temperatures, especially in the lower mantle, become crucial for the thermal evolution—the thermostat effect suggested to regulate the interior temperatures in terrestrial planets does not work for massive planets if the viscosity is strongly pressure dependent. The sluggish convection and the potential formation of the CMB-lid reduce the convective vigor throughout the mantle, thereby affecting convective stresses, lithospheric thicknesses, and heat fluxes. The pressure dependence of the viscosity may therefore also strongly affect the propensity of plate tectonics, volcanic activity, and the generation of a magnetic field of super-Earths.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Andras Zsom; Sara Seager; Julien de Wit; Vlada Stamenković
We explore the minimum distance from a host star where an exoplanet could potentially be habitable in order not to discard close-in rocky exoplanets for follow-up observations. We find that the inner edge of the Habitable Zone for hot desert worlds can be as close as 0.38 AU around a solar-like star, if the greenhouse effect is reduced (~1% relative humidity) and the surface albedo is increased. We consider a wide range of atmospheric and planetary parameters such as the mixing ratios of greenhouse gases (water vapor and CO2), surface albedo, pressure, and gravity. Intermediate surface pressure (~1-10 bars) is necessary to limit water loss and to simultaneously sustain an active water cycle. We additionally find that the water loss timescale is influenced by the atmospheric CO2 level, because it indirectly influences the stratospheric water mixing ratio. If the CO2 mixing ratio of dry planets at the inner edge is smaller than 10–4, the water loss timescale is ~1 billion years, which is considered here too short for life to evolve. We also show that the expected transmission spectra of hot desert worlds are similar to an Earth-like planet. Therefore, an instrument designed to identify biosignature gases in an Earth-like atmosphere can also identify similarly abundant gases in the atmospheres of dry planets. Our inner edge limit is closer to the host star than previous estimates. As a consequence, the occurrence rate of potentially habitable planets is larger than previously thought.
Icarus | 2011
Vlada Stamenković; Doris Breuer; Tilman Spohn
Icarus | 2014
Vlada Stamenković; Doris Breuer
Archive | 2010
Vlada Stamenković; Doris Breuer
Archive | 2009
Vlada Stamenković; L. Noack; D. Breuer
2014 AGU Fall Meeting | 2014
Vlada Stamenković
arXiv: Earth and Planetary Astrophysics | 2013
Brice-Olivier Demory; Sara Seager; Jack J. Lissauer; Gregory Laughlin; Daniel Huber; Matthew J. Payne; A. H. M. J. Triaud; Michaël Gillon; Julien de Wit; Andras Zsom; Vlada Stamenković; Franck Selsis; Jérémy Leconte; D. Queloz
Archive | 2010
Vlada Stamenković; L. Noack; D. Breuer; T. Spohn
Archive | 2010
Lena Noack; Vlada Stamenković; Doris Breuer