Efficiency of Planetesimal Ablation in Giant Planetary Envelopes
Arazi Pinhas, Nikku Madhusudhan, Cathie Clarke

TL;DR
This study models how planetesimals of various sizes and compositions ablate in giant planet atmospheres, influencing the observed atmospheric elemental ratios and providing insights into planetary formation processes.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed ablation model considering aerodynamic and thermal effects across different compositions, sizes, and impact conditions.
Findings
Icy impactors are fully ablated in the outer envelope across many parameters.
Iron impactors also experience significant ablation, especially at high velocities and smaller sizes.
Ablation efficiency affects the interpretation of atmospheric elemental abundances in giant planets.
Abstract
Observations of exoplanetary spectra are leading to unprecedented constraints on their atmospheric elemental abundances, particularly O/H, C/H, and C/O ratios. Recent studies suggest that elemental ratios could provide important constraints on formation and migration mechanisms of giant exoplanets. A fundamental assumption in such studies is that the chemical composition of the planetary envelope represents the sum-total of compositions of the accreted gas and solids during the formation history of the planet. We investigate the efficiency with which accreted planetesimals ablate in a giant planetary envelope thereby contributing to its composition rather than sinking to the core. From considerations of aerodynamic drag causing `frictional ablation' and the envelope temperature structure causing `thermal ablation', we compute mass ablations for impacting planetesimals of radii 30 m to 1…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
