Melting and Mixing States of the Earth's Mantle after the Moon-Forming Impact
Miki Nakajima, David J. Stevenson

TL;DR
This study uses impact simulations to explore how the Earth's mantle was affected by the Moon-forming impact, revealing that the mantle likely remained unmixed and mostly molten, with implications for Earth's early evolution.
Contribution
It provides new insights into mantle mixing and melting after the giant impact using SPH simulations across different impact scenarios and equations of state.
Findings
Mantle remains unmixed in standard impact model
Mantle becomes mostly molten in all impact scenarios
Impact-induced entropy gains are not well predicted by Rankine-Hugoniot equations
Abstract
The Earth's Moon is thought to have formed by an impact between the Earth and an impactor around 4.5 billion years ago. This impact could have been so energetic that it could have mixed and homogenized the Earth's mantle. However, this view appears to be inconsistent with geochemical studies that suggest that the Earth's mantle was not mixed by the impact. Another plausible outcome is that this energetic impact melted the whole mantle, but the extent of mantle melting is not well understood even though it must have had a significant effect on the subsequent evolution of the Earth's interior and atmosphere. To understand the initial state of the Earth's mantle, we perform giant impact simulations using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) for three different models: (a) standard: a Mars-sized impactor hits the proto-Earth, (b) fast-spinning Earth: a small impactor hits a rapidly…
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