Water Delivery and Giant Impacts in the 'Grand Tack' Scenario
David P. O'Brien, Kevin J. Walsh, Alessandro Morbidelli, Sean N., Raymond, Avi M. Mandell

TL;DR
This paper models terrestrial planet formation under the 'Grand Tack' scenario, showing that giant impacts and primitive planetesimal accretion can explain Earth's water content and orbital characteristics.
Contribution
It introduces a new model combining giant planet migration with primitive planetesimal accretion, reproducing Earth's water content and orbital distribution.
Findings
Primitive planetesimals contribute 1-2% of planetary mass.
Total water delivered is comparable to Earth's current water.
Some planets experience late giant impacts similar to Earth's Moon-forming event.
Abstract
A new model for terrestrial planet formation (Hansen 2009, Walsh et al. 2011) has explored accretion in a truncated protoplanetary disk, and found that such a configuration is able to reproduce the distribution of mass among the planets in the Solar System, especially the Earth/Mars mass ratio, which earlier simulations have generally not been able to match. Walsh et al. tested a possible mechanism to truncate the disk--a two-stage, inward-then-outward migration of Jupiter and Saturn, as found in numerous hydrodynamical simulations of giant planet formation. In addition to truncating the disk and producing a more realistic Earth/Mars mass ratio, the migration of the giant planets also populates the asteroid belt with two distinct populations of bodies--the inner belt is filled by bodies originating inside of 3 AU, and the outer belt is filled with bodies originating from between and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
