Abstract

The heat flux across the core-mantle boundary (Q(CMB)) is the key parameter to understand the Earth's thermal history and evolution. Mineralogical constraints of the Q(CMB) require deciphering contributions of the lattice and radiative components to the thermal conductivity at high pressure and temperature in lower mantle phases with depth-dependent composition. Here we determine the radiative conductivity (k(rad)) of a realistic lower mantle (pyrolite) in situusing an ultra-bright light probe and fast time-resolved spectroscopic techniques in laser-heated diamond anvil cells. We find that the mantle opacity increases critically upon heating to similar to 3000 K at 40-135 GPa, resulting in an unexpectedly low radiative conductivity decreasing with depth from similar to 0.8 W/m/K at 1000 km to similar to 0.35 W/m/K at the CMB, the latter being similar to 30 times smaller than the estimated lattice thermal conductivity at such conditions. Thus, radiative heat transport is blocked due to an increased optical absorption in the hot lower mantle resulting in a moderate CMB heat flow of similar to 8.5 TW,on the lower end of previous Q(CMB) estimates based on the mantle and core dynamics. This moderate rate of core cooling implies an inner core age of about 1 Gy and is compatible with both thermally- and compositionally-driven ancient geodynamo. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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