Ring Formation around Giant Planets by Tidal Disruption of a Single Passing Large Kuiper Belt Object
Ryuki Hyodo, S\'ebastien Charnoz, Keiji Ohtsuki, Hidenori Genda

TL;DR
This study models how tidal disruption of passing large Kuiper Belt objects can lead to the formation of planetary rings, explaining their composition and mass around giant planets like Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Contribution
First to simulate tidal disruption and subsequent ring formation from passing objects, linking debris dynamics to observed ring properties and compositions.
Findings
Captured debris can form rings with sufficient mass.
Collisions lead to small particles and thin rings.
Differences in capture efficiency explain compositional variations.
Abstract
The origin of rings around giant planets remains elusive. Saturn's rings are massive and made of 90-95% of water ice. In contrast, the much less massive rings of Uranus and Neptune are dark and likely to have higher rock fraction. Here we investigate, for the first time, the tidal disruption of a passing object, including the subsequent formation of planetary rings. First, we perform SPH simulations of the tidal destruction of big differentiated objects () that experience close encounters with Saturn or Uranus. We find that about % of the mass of the passing body is gravitationally captured around the planet. However, these fragments are initially big chunks and have highly eccentric orbits around the planet. Then, we perform N-body simulations including the planet's oblateness, starting with data obtained from the SPH simulations. Our N-body simulations…
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