From planetesimals to terrestrial planets: N-body simulations including the effects of nebular gas and giant planets
Ryuji Morishima, Joachim Stadel, Ben Moore

TL;DR
This study uses advanced N-body simulations to explore how gas effects and giant planet orbits influence terrestrial planet formation, revealing the importance of gas dissipation timescales and Jupiter's eccentricity on planetary outcomes.
Contribution
Introduces a new parallel treecode for detailed N-body simulations including nebular gas effects and varying giant planet orbits, advancing understanding of terrestrial planet formation.
Findings
Gas dissipation timescale of 1-2 Myr is crucial for terrestrial planet formation.
Jupiter's orbital eccentricity significantly affects planetesimal dynamics and impact timing.
Final planetary configurations depend on initial mass distribution and giant planet orbits.
Abstract
We present results from a suite of N-body simulations that follow the accretion history of the terrestrial planets using a new parallel treecode that we have developed. We initially place 2000 equal size planetesimals between 0.5--4.0 AU and the collisional growth is followed until the completion of planetary accretion (> 100 Myr). All the important effect of gas in laminar disks are taken into account: the aerodynamic gas drag, the disk-planet interaction including Type I migration, and the global disk potential which causes inward migration of secular resonances as the gas dissipates. We vary the initial total mass and spatial distribution of the planetesimals, the time scale of dissipation of nebular gas, and orbits of Jupiter and Saturn. We end up with one to five planets in the terrestrial region. In order to maintain sufficient mass in this region in the presence of Type I…
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