Critical core mass for enriched envelopes: the role of H2O condensation
J. Venturini, Y. Alibert, W. Benz, M. Ikoma

TL;DR
This study explores how water condensation in enriched planetary envelopes affects the critical core mass needed for giant planet formation, revealing significant reductions especially at high metallicities.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed internal structure model incorporating water condensation and envelope enrichment effects, highlighting their impact on critical core mass calculations.
Findings
Critical core mass decreases with envelope enrichment.
Water condensation significantly reduces the critical core mass at high metallicities.
Enrichment effects persist even out of chemical equilibrium.
Abstract
Context. Within the core accretion scenario of planetary formation, most simulations performed so far always assume the accreting envelope to have a solar composition. From the study of meteorite showers on Earth and numerical simulations, we know that planetesimals must undergo thermal ablation and disruption when crossing a protoplanetary envelope. Once the protoplanet has acquired an atmosphere, the primordial envelope gets enriched in volatiles and silicates from the planetesimals. This change of envelope composition during the formation can have a significant effect in the final atmospheric composition and on the formation timescale of giant planets. Aims. To investigate the physical implications of considering the envelope enrichment of protoplanets due to the disruption of icy planetesimals during their way to the core. Particular focus is placed on the effect on the critical…
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