Terrestrial Planet Formation in Extra-Solar Planetary Systems
Sean N. Raymond (University of Colorado)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the process of terrestrial planet formation in extrasolar systems, highlighting the stages, influencing factors, and potential for habitable planets, including effects of giant planet migration.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the dynamical steps and conditions leading to terrestrial planet formation in diverse extrasolar environments.
Findings
Terrestrial planets form through a series of dynamical stages from planetesimals to full-sized planets.
Giant planet perturbations influence the final composition and volatile content of terrestrial planets.
Many extrasolar systems with giant planets could still host habitable terrestrial planets.
Abstract
Terrestrial planets form in a series of dynamical steps from the solid component of circumstellar disks. First, km-sized planetesimals form likely via a combination of sticky collisions, turbulent concentration of solids, and gravitational collapse from micron-sized dust grains in the thin disk midplane. Second, planetesimals coalesce to form Moon- to Mars-sized protoplanets, also called "planetary embryos". Finally, full-sized terrestrial planets accrete from protoplanets and planetesimals. This final stage of accretion lasts about 10-100 Myr and is strongly affected by gravitational perturbations from any gas giant planets, which are constrained to form more quickly, during the 1-10 Myr lifetime of the gaseous component of the disk. It is during this final stage that the bulk compositions and volatile (e.g., water) contents of terrestrial planets are set, depending on their feeding…
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