Accretion and differentiation of the terrestrial planets with implications for the compositions of early-formed Solar System bodies and accretion of water
David C. Rubie, Seth A. Jacobson, Alessandro Morbidelli, Dave P., O'Brien, Ed D. Young, Jellie de Vries, Herbert Palme, Daniel J. Frost

TL;DR
This study combines a core-mantle differentiation model with N-body simulations to understand planetary formation, revealing heterogeneous accretion, variable oxidation states, and detailed core compositions of Earth and Mars.
Contribution
It introduces an integrated model linking accretion dynamics with core-mantle differentiation, constrained by planetary compositions and applied to multiple simulations.
Findings
Earth's accretion was heterogeneous.
Metal-silicate equilibration pressures increase during accretion.
Earth's and Mars's core compositions are predicted with specific element contents.
Abstract
In order to test planetary accretion and differentiation scenarios, we integrated a multistage core-mantle differentiation model with N-body accretion simulations. Impacts between embryos and planetesimals result in magma ocean formation and episodes of core formation. The core formation model combines rigorous chemical mass balance with metal-silicate element partitioning data. The primary constraint on the combined model is the composition of the Earth's primitive mantle, the composition of the Martian mantle, and the mass fractions of the metallic cores of Earth and Mars. The model is refined by least squares minimization with up to five fitting parameters that consist of the metal-silicate equilibrium pressure and 1-4 parameters that define the starting compositions of primitive bodies. This integrated model has been applied to 6 Grand Tack simulations. Investigations of a broad…
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