On the origin of elemental abundances in the terrestrial planets
Sebastian Elser, Michael R. Meyer, Ben Moore

TL;DR
This study combines disk models, chemical calculations, and dynamical simulations to investigate the elemental composition of terrestrial planets, revealing how initial conditions influence planetary diversity but not fully explaining Mercury's unique composition.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling approach integrating disk properties, chemical equilibrium, and dynamical simulations to study planetary elemental abundances, highlighting the impact of initial conditions.
Findings
Disk model choice significantly affects planetary composition gradients.
Higher pressure and temperature in disks lead to greater chemical diversity.
Large variations in simulated abundances may explain the diversity of Solar System planets.
Abstract
The abundances of elements in the Earth and the terrestrial planets provide the initial conditions for life and clues as to the history and formation of the Solar System. We follow the pioneering work of Bond et al. (2010) and combine circumstellar disk models, chemical equilibrium calculations and dynamical simulations of planet formation to study the bulk composition of rocky planets. We use condensation sequence calculations to estimate the initial abundance of solids in the circumstellar disk with properties determined from time dependent theoretical models. We combine this with dynamical simulations of planetesimal growth that trace the solids during the planet formation process. We calculate the elemental abundances in the resulting planets and explore how these vary with the choice of disk model and the initial conditions within the Solar Nebula. Although certain…
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