A low mass for Mars from Jupiter's early gas-driven migration
Kevin J. Walsh, Alessando Morbidelli, Sean N. Raymond, David P., O'Brien, Avi M. Mandell

TL;DR
This paper presents simulations showing how Jupiter's early gas-driven migration shaped the inner Solar System, leading to a small Mars and a realistic asteroid belt composition.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Jupiter's inward and outward migration can explain Mars's small mass and the asteroid belt's structure, a novel insight into planetary formation.
Findings
Mars's small mass results from Jupiter's migration-induced disk truncation.
The asteroid belt's compositional diversity is due to Jupiter's scattering.
The model aligns with observed terrestrial planet mass ratios.
Abstract
Jupiter and Saturn formed in a few million years (Haisch et al. 2001) from a gas-dominated protoplanetary disk, and were susceptible to gas-driven migration of their orbits on timescales of only ~100,000 years (Armitage 2007). Hydrodynamic simulations show that these giant planets can undergo a two-stage, inward-then-outward, migration (Masset & Snellgrove 2001, Morbidelli & Crida 2007, Pierens & Nelson 2008). The terrestrial planets finished accreting much later (Klein et al. 2009), and their characteristics, including Mars' small mass, are best reproduced by starting from a planetesimal disk with an outer edge at about one astronomical unit from the Sun (Wetherill 1978, Hansen 2009) (1 AU is the Earth-Sun distance). Here we report simulations of the early Solar System that show how the inward migration of Jupiter to 1.5 AU, and its subsequent outward migration, lead to a planetesimal…
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