Giant Impact: An Efficient Mechanism for the Devolatilization of Super-Earths
Shang-Fei Liu (UCSC), Yasunori Hori (UCSC, NAOJ/NINS), D. N. C. Lin, (UCSC, PKU/THU/NAOC), Erik Asphaug (ASU)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how giant impacts can efficiently strip volatile atmospheres from super-Earths, explaining their compositional diversity and the observed variations in their mass-radius relationships.
Contribution
It presents three-dimensional simulations showing giant impacts can deplete atmospheres and homogenize interiors, offering a new mechanism for planetary devolatilization.
Findings
Giant impacts can remove most of the H/He atmosphere immediately.
Post-impact planets cool and contract slowly, affecting atmosphere retention.
The stochastic nature of impacts explains diversity in super-Earth compositions.
Abstract
Mini-Neptunes and volatile-poor super-Earths coexist on adjacent orbits in proximity to host stars such as Kepler-36 and Kepler-11. Several post-formation processes have been proposed for explaining the origin of the compositional diversity: the mass loss via stellar XUV irradiation, degassing of accreted material, and in-situ accumulation of the disk gas. Close-in planets are also likely to experience giant impacts during the advanced stage of planet formation. This study examines the possibility of transforming volatile-rich super-Earths / mini-Neptunes into volatile-depleted super-Earths through giant impacts. We present the results of three-dimensional giant impact simulations in the accretionary and disruptive regimes. Target planets are modeled with a three-layered structure composed of an iron core, silicate mantle and hydrogen/helium envelope. In the disruptive case, the giant…
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