4.7 Article

COLLISIONAL STRIPPING AND DISRUPTION OF SUPER-EARTHS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 700, Issue 2, Pages L118-L122

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/700/2/L118

Keywords

planetary systems: formation; planets and satellites: formation

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The final stage of planet formation is dominated by collisions between planetary embryos. The dynamics of this stage determine the orbital configuration and the mass and composition of planets in the system. In the solar system, late giant impacts have been proposed for Mercury, Earth, Mars, and Pluto. In the case of Mercury, this giant impact may have significantly altered the bulk composition of the planet. Here we present the results of smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations of high-velocity (up to similar to 5 nu(esc)) collisions between 1 and 10 M(circle plus) planets of initially terrestrial composition to investigate the end stages of formation of extrasolar super-Earths. As found in previous simulations of collisions between smaller bodies, when collision energies exceed simple merging, giant impacts are divided into two regimes: (1) disruption and (2) hit-and-run (a grazing inelastic collision and projectile escape). Disruption occurs when the impact parameter is near zero, when the projectile mass is small compared to the target, or at extremely high velocities. In the disruption regime, we derive the criteria for catastrophic disruption (when half the total colliding mass is lost), the transition energy between accretion and erosion, and a scaling law for the change in bulk composition (iron-to-silicate ratio) resulting from collisional stripping of a mantle.

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