Dynamical and collisional constraints on a stochastic late veneer on the terrestrial planets
Sean N. Raymond, Hilke E. Schlichting, Franck Hersant, and Franck, Selsis

TL;DR
This study models the late veneer phase of terrestrial planets, showing that large impactors can explain Earth's HSE abundance and orbital excitation, with implications for planetary composition and evolution.
Contribution
It provides a stochastic simulation of late veneer accretion, demonstrating the role of large impactors in Earth's HSE enrichment and orbital dynamics.
Findings
Large impactors (D > 1000km) can deliver Earth's observed HSE levels.
Erosive impacts on Mercury and the Moon limit material accretion from large bodies.
Impacts could have significantly altered Mercury's mass and spin angular momentum.
Abstract
Given their tendency to be incorporated into the core during differentiation, the highly-siderophile elements (HSEs) in Earth's mantle are thought to have been accreted as a `late veneer' after the end of the giant impact phase. Bottke et al (2010) proposed that the large Earth-to-Moon HSE abundance ratio can be explained if the late veneer was characterized by large (D = 1000-4000km) impactors. Here we simulate the evolution of the terrestrial planets during a stochastic late veneer phase from the end of accretion until the start of the late heavy bombardment ~500 Myr later. We show that a late veneer population of 0.05 Earth masses dominated by large (D > 1000km) bodies naturally delivers a ~0.01 Earth mass veneer to Earth, consistent with constraints. The eccentricities and inclinations of the terrestrial planets are excited by close encounters with the largest late veneer bodies. We…
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