Simultaneous formation of Solar System giant planets
O. M. Guilera, A. Fortier, A. Brunini, O. G. Benvenuto

TL;DR
This study investigates the conditions under which Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune could have formed simultaneously in the early solar system, supporting the initial compact configuration suggested by the Nice model.
Contribution
It demonstrates that smooth protoplanetary disk density profiles favor the simultaneous formation of giant planets, aligning with the Nice model's initial conditions.
Findings
Smooth surface density profiles ($p \, \leq \, 1.5$) favor simultaneous formation.
Steep density profiles ($p \sim 2$) make simultaneous formation unlikely.
Multiple initial disk conditions successfully produce the giant planets.
Abstract
In the last few years, the so-called "Nice model" has got a significant importance in the study of the formation and evolution of the solar system. According to this model, the initial orbital configuration of the giant planets was much more compact than the one we observe today. We study the formation of the giant planets in connection with some parameters that describe the protoplanetary disk. The aim of this study is to establish the conditions that favor their simultaneous formation in line with the initial configuration proposed by the Nice model. We focus in the conditions that lead to the simultaneous formation of two massive cores, corresponding to Jupiter and Saturn, able to achieve the cross-over mass (where the mass of the envelope of the giant planet equals the mass of the core, and gaseous runway starts) while Uranus and Neptune have to be able to grow to their current…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
