Chaotic exchange of solid material between planetary systems: implications for lithopanspermia
Edward Belbruno, Amaya Moro-Martin, Renu Malhotra, Dmitry Savransky

TL;DR
This study investigates a low energy mechanism for meteoroid transfer between planetary systems in star clusters, suggesting it could have facilitated lithopanspermia during the early Solar System's formation period.
Contribution
It introduces a more efficient transfer mechanism for solid material between planetary systems, supported by Monte Carlo simulations and astrophysical modeling.
Findings
Transfer timescales of 10s Myr for meteoroids.
Estimated number of transferred bodies >10 kg: 1E14-3E16.
Potential for life transfer during Solar System's early history.
Abstract
We examine a low energy mechanism for the transfer of meteoroids between two planetary systems embedded in a star cluster using quasi-parabolic orbits of minimal energy. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we find that the exchange of meteoroids could have been significantly more efficient than previously estimated. Our study is relevant to astrobiology as it addresses whether life on Earth could have been transferred to other planetary systems in the solar system's birth cluster and whether life on Earth could have been transferred here from beyond the solar system. In the solar system, the timescale over which solid material was delivered to the region from where it could be transferred via this mechanism likely extended to several hundred million years (as indicated by the 3.8-4.0 Ga epoch of the Late Heavy Bombardment). This timescale could have overlapped with the lifetime of the Solar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
