- Henning, Wade G;
- Renaud, Joseph P;
- Mandell, Avi M;
- Saxena, Prabal;
- Hurford, Terry A;
- Matsumura, Soko;
- Glaze, Lori S;
- Livengood, Timothy A;
- Airapetian, Vladimir;
- Asphaug, Erik;
- Teske, Johanna K;
- Schwieterman, Edward;
- Efroimsky, Michael;
- Makarov, Valeri V;
- Berghea, Ciprian T;
- Bleacher, Jacob;
- Rushby, Andrew;
- Lee, Yuni;
- Kuang, Weijia;
- Barnes, Rory;
- Dong, Chuanfei;
- Driscoll, Peter;
- Domagal-Goldman, Shawn D;
- Schmerr, Nicholas C;
- Genio, Anthony D Del;
- Jensen, Adam G;
- Kaltenegger, Lisa;
- Elkins-Tanton, Linda;
- Shock, Everett L;
- Sohl, Linda E;
- Quintana, Elisa;
- Schaefer, Laura;
- Barclay, Thomas S;
- Fujii, Yuka;
- Hamano, Keiko;
- Petro, Noah E;
- Lopez, Eric D;
- Sasselov, Dimitar D
The geophysics of extrasolar planets is a scientific topic often regarded as
standing largely beyond the reach of near-term observations. This reality in no
way diminishes the central role of geophysical phenomena in shaping planetary
outcomes, from formation, to thermal and chemical evolution, to numerous issues
of surface and near-surface habitability. We emphasize that for a balanced
understanding of extrasolar planets, it is important to look beyond the natural
biases of current observing tools, and actively seek unique pathways to
understand exoplanet interiors as best as possible during the long interim
prior to a time when internal components are more directly accessible. Such
pathways include but are not limited to: (a) enhanced theoretical and numerical
modeling, (b) laboratory research on critical material properties, (c)
measurement of geophysical properties by indirect inference from imprints left
on atmospheric and orbital properties, and (d) the purpose-driven use of Solar
System object exploration expressly for its value in comparative planetology
toward exoplanet-analogs. Breaking down barriers that envision local Solar
System exploration, including the study of Earth's own deep interior, as
separate from and in financial competition with extrasolar planet research, may
greatly improve the rate of needed scientific progress for exoplanet
geophysics. As the number of known rocky and icy exoplanets grows in the years
ahead, we expect demand for expertise in 'exogeoscience' will expand at a
commensurately intense pace. We highlight key topics, including: how water
oceans below ice shells may dominate the total habitability of our galaxy by
volume, how free-floating nomad planets may often attain habitable subsurface
oceans supported by radionuclide decay, and how deep interiors may critically
interact with atmospheric mass loss via dynamo-driven magnetic fields.