From Dust To Planetesimal: The Snowball Phase ?
Ji-Wei Xie (1, 2), Matthew J. Payne (2), Philippe Thebault (3), Ji-Lin, Zhou (1), and Jian Ge (2) ((1) Nanjing University, China (2) University of, Florida, USA (3) Observatoire de Paris, France)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the 'snowball phase' in planet formation, where planetesimals grow by dust accretion before mutual collisions, highlighting its potential significance in early planetary development.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified model analyzing the snowball growth phase, showing its potential to significantly increase planetesimal sizes before collisions dominate.
Findings
Snowball growth can increase planetesimal mass by a factor of 10^6.
Growth is most effective in low-turbulence, low-rate creation environments.
The phase can occur within typical protoplanetary disk lifetimes.
Abstract
The standard model of planet formation considers an initial phase in which planetesimals form from a dust disk, followed by a phase of mutual planetesimal-planetesimal collisions, leading eventually to the formation of planetary embryos. However, there is a potential transition phase (which we call the "snowball phase"), between the formation of the first planetesimals and the onset of mutual collisions amongst them, which has often been either ignored or underestimated in previous studies. In this snowball phase, isolated planetesimals move on Keplerian orbits and grow solely via the direct accretion of sub-cm sized dust entrained with the gas in the protoplanetary disk. Using a simplified model in which planetesimals are progressively produced from the dust, we consider the expected sizes to which the planetesimals can grow before mutual collisions commence and derive the dependence…
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