
Exploring Earth And Planetary Materials With Neutrons, June 2021, Vol. 17, No. 3
June 28, 2024
Carbonatites, October 2021, Vol. 17, No. 5
June 28, 2024Geoscience Beyond The Solar System, August 2021, Vol. 17, No. 4
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A revolution in astronomical observation has expanded the horizon of geological processes out from the handful of rocky and icy bodies in our solar system to the now thousands of planets detected around other stars (“exoplanets”). A major result from this burgeoning field is that rocky planets are the most abundant.
Geoscience Beyond The Solar System
August 2021, Vol. 17, No. 4
A revolution in astronomical observation has expanded the horizon of geological processes out from the handful of rocky and icy bodies in our solar system to the now thousands of planets detected around other stars (“exoplanets”). A major result from this burgeoning field is that rocky planets are the most abundant. A remarkable ~11% of Sunlike stars host planets similar in their size and incident flux to Earth, whilst many more planets may exist in states relevant to past periods of terrestrial evolution, either trapped as perpetual magma oceans or locked into a snowball climate. This issue highlights the myriad opportunities exoplanets represent for investigating fundamental geological processes and the opportunities for the geosciences to contribute to this exciting young field.
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Order your copy of the August 2021 issue of Elements magazine today and explore geoscience beyond the solar system.
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