Planetary Systems and the Formation of Habitable Planets
Rudolf Dvorak, Thomas I. Maindl, Christoph Burger, Christoph Sch\"afer, and Roland Speith

TL;DR
This paper investigates the formation of habitable planets, focusing on water delivery mechanisms, initial conditions, and collision outcomes, using numerical and SPH simulations to understand planetary water content and formation processes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how initial distributions and water content of planetesimals influence habitable planet formation, incorporating detailed collision simulations.
Findings
Water content in planets depends on initial distribution and distance from the Sun.
Collision parameters significantly affect the formation and water retention of planetary bodies.
Numerical and SPH simulations reveal diverse outcomes in planet formation scenarios.
Abstract
As part of a national scientific network 'Pathways to Habitability' the formation of planets and the delivery of water onto these planets is a key question as water is essential for the development of life. In the first part of the paper we summarize the state of the art of planet formation - which is still under debate in the astronomical community - before we show our results on this topic. The outcome of our numerical simulations depends a lot on the choice of the initial distribution of planetesimals and planetary embryos after gas disappeared in the protoplanetary disk. We also take into account that some of these planetesimals of sizes in the order of the mass of the Moon already contained water; the quantity depends on the distance from the Sun - close-by bodies are dry, but starting from a distance of about 2 AU they can contain substantial amounts of water. We assume that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Planetary Science and Exploration
