Global Models of Planet Formation and Evolution
C. Mordasini, P. Molli\`ere, K.-M. Dittkrist, S. Jin, Y., Alibert

TL;DR
This paper reviews global models of planet formation and evolution, emphasizing their components, current results, and future prospects for understanding exoplanet populations and habitability.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of the physics, approaches, and results of planetary population synthesis models, highlighting their potential and limitations.
Findings
Global models predict planetary mass functions and mass-radius relations.
Physical processes during formation significantly influence observable properties.
Future models may predict planetary habitability.
Abstract
Despite the increase in observational data on exoplanets, the processes that lead to the formation of planets are still not well understood. But thanks to the high number of known exoplanets, it is now possible to look at them as a population that puts statistical constraints on theoretical models. A method that uses these constraints is planetary population synthesis. Its key element is a global model of planet formation and evolution that directly predicts observable planetary properties based on properties of the natal protoplanetary disk. To do so, global models build on many specialized models that address one specific physical process. We thoroughly review the physics of the sub-models included in global formation models. The sub-models can be classified as models describing the protoplanetary disk (gas and solids), the (proto)planet (solid core, gaseous envelope, and atmosphere),…
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