Formation of pebble-pile planetesimals
Karl Wahlberg Jansson, Anders Johansen

TL;DR
This paper models the collapse of pebble clouds into planetesimals, revealing how size and mass influence collapse timescales and internal structure, with implications for understanding Solar System bodies like 67P and Pluto.
Contribution
It introduces a zero-dimensional statistical model to simulate pebble cloud collapse, linking planetesimal size to formation timescale and internal composition.
Findings
Large planetesimals (>100 km) collapse in ~25 years.
Lower-mass planetesimals take hundreds to thousands of years to collapse.
Inner structure varies with size, from primordial pebbles to fragmented dust.
Abstract
The first stage of planet formation is the accumulation of dust and ice grains into mm-cm-sized pebbles. These pebbles can clump together through the streaming instability and form gravitationally bound pebble 'clouds'. Pebbles inside such a cloud will undergo mutual collisions, dissipating energy into heat. As the cloud loses energy, it gradually contracts towards solid density. We model this process and investigate two important properties of the collapse: (i) the timescale of the collapse and (ii) the temporal evolution of the pebble size distribution. Our numerical model of the pebble cloud is zero-dimensional and treats collisions with a statistical method. We find that planetesimals with radii larger than 100 km collapse on the free-fall timescale of about 25 years. Lower-mass clouds have longer pebble collision timescales and collapse much more slowly, with collapse times of a…
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