Fossilized condensation lines in the Solar System protoplanetary disk
A. Morbidelli, B. Bitsch, A. Crida, M. Gounelle, T. Guillot, S., Jacobson, A. Johansen, M. Lambrechts, E. Lega

TL;DR
The paper proposes that giant planets like Jupiter can fossilize snowlines in the protoplanetary disk, explaining water depletion in the inner Solar System and the formation of planetesimals at specific locations.
Contribution
It introduces a model where giant planets interrupt icy particle drift, fossilizing snowlines and influencing planetary composition and formation zones.
Findings
Jupiter's mass likely reached ~20 Earth masses at 3 AU.
Fossilized snowlines explain water-poor inner planets.
Silicate condensation line may determine Mercury's small mass.
Abstract
The terrestrial planets and the asteroids dominant in the inner asteroid belt are water poor. However, in the protoplanetary disk the temperature should have decreased below water condensation level well before the disk was photoevaporated. Thus, the global water depletion of the inner Solar System is puzling. We show that, even if the inner disk becomes cold, there cannot be direct condensation of water. This is because the snowline moves towards the Sun more slowly than the gas itself. The appearance of ice in a range of heliocentric distances swept by the snowline can only be due to the radial drift of icy particles from the outer disk. However, if a sufficiently massive planet is present, the radial drift of particles is interrupted, because the disk acquires a superKeplerian rotation just outside of the planetary orbit. From this result, we propose that the precursor of Jupiter…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · SAS software applications and methods
