4.6 Article

The Role of Early Giant-planet Instability in Terrestrial Planet Formation

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ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
卷 161, 期 2, 页码 -

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IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/abc8ef

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  1. NASA SSW program
  2. Brazilian National Council of Research (CNPq)
  3. NASA EW program

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The terrestrial planets are believed to have formed by violent collisions of tens of lunar- to Mars-size protoplanets within 200 million years after the dispersal of the protoplanetary gas disk. The rapid formation and radial migration of the solar system giant planets may have influenced the formation of the terrestrial planets.
The terrestrial planets are believed to have formed by violent collisions of tens of lunar- to Mars-size protoplanets at time t < 200 Myr after the protoplanetary gas disk dispersal (t(0)). The solar system giant planets rapidly formed during the protoplanetary disk stage and, after t(0), radially migrated by interacting with outer disk planetesimals. An early (t < 100 Myr) dynamical instability is thought to have occurred with Jupiter having gravitational encounters with a planetary-size body, jumping inward by similar to 0.2-0.5 au, and landing on its current, mildly eccentric orbit. Here we investigate how the giant-planet instability affected the formation of the terrestrial planets. We study several instability cases that were previously shown to match many solar system constraints. We find that resonances with giant planets help to remove solids available for accretion near similar to 1.5 au, thus stalling the growth of Mars. It does not matter, however, whether the giant planets are placed on their current orbits at t(0) or whether they realistically evolve in one of our instability models; the results are practically the same. The tight orbital spacing of Venus and Earth is difficult to reproduce in our simulations, including cases where bodies grow from a narrow annulus at 0.7-1 au, because protoplanets tend to spread radially during accretion. The best results are obtained in the narrow-annulus model when protoplanets emerging from the dispersing gas nebula are assumed to have (at least) the mass of Mars. This suggests efficient accretion of the terrestrial protoplanets during the first similar to 10 Myr of the solar system.

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