On the water delivery to terrestrial embryos by ice pebble accretion
Takao Sato, Satoshi Okuzumi, Shigeru Ida

TL;DR
This study models icy pebble accretion in protoplanetary disks to explain Earth's water content, showing that disk size, turbulence, and snow line timing critically influence water delivery to terrestrial planets.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of icy pebble accretion's role in Earth's water content, highlighting the impact of disk parameters and snow line migration timing.
Findings
Water content depends on disk size, turbulence, and snow line timing.
Compact disks and strong turbulence reduce water delivery.
Early snow line migration allows for higher water content.
Abstract
Standard accretion disk models suggest that the snow line in the solar nebula migrated interior to the Earth's orbit in a late stage of nebula evolution. In this late stage, a significant amount of ice could have been delivered to 1 AU from outer regions in the form of mm to dm-sized pebbles. This raises the question why the present Earth is so depleted of water (with the ocean mass being as small as 0.023% of the Earth mass). Here we quantify the amount of icy pebbles accreted by terrestrial embryos after the migration of the snow line assuming that no mechanism halts the pebble flow in outer disk regions. We use a simplified version of the coagulation equation to calculate the formation and radial inward drift of icy pebbles in a protoplanetary disk. The pebble accretion cross section of an embryo is calculated using analytic expressions presented by recent studies. We find that the…
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