Did Saturn's rings form during the Late Heavy Bombardment ?
Sebastien Charnoz, Alessandro Morbidelli, Luke H. Dones, Julien Salmon

TL;DR
This study evaluates whether Saturn's rings could have formed during the Late Heavy Bombardment by analyzing cometary flux and satellite disruption scenarios, concluding that the LHB was a plausible period for ring formation.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative assessment of cometary flux during the LHB and explores implications for Saturn's ring origin and satellite survival, integrating the Nice model and size distribution data.
Findings
High cometary flux during LHB makes ring formation scenarios plausible.
The tidal disruption scenario implies all giant planets should have rings.
Saturn's rings likely formed during the LHB, with satellite survival affected.
Abstract
The origin of Saturn\' s massive ring system is still unknown. Two popular scenarios - the tidal splitting of passing comets and the collisional destruction of a satellite - rely on a high cometary flux in the past. In the present paper we attempt to quantify the cometary flux during the Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB) to assess the likelihood of both scenarios. Our analysis relies on the so-called Nice model of the origin of the LHB (Tsiganis et al., 2005; Morbidelli et al., 2005; Gomes et al., 2005) and on the size distribution of the primordial trans-Neptunian planetesimals constrained in Charnoz & Morbidelli (2007). We find that the cometary flux on Saturn during the LHB was so high that both scenarios for the formation of Saturn rings are viable in principle. However, a more detailed study shows that the comet tidal disruption scenario implies that all four giant planets should have…
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