Formation, stratification, and mixing of the cores of Earth and Venus
Seth A. Jacobson, David C. Rubie, John Hernlund, Alessandro, Morbidelli, Miki Nakajima

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the initial formation and stratification of Earth and Venus cores influence their ability to generate magnetic fields, highlighting the role of impacts and compositional differences.
Contribution
It models core formation processes showing stable stratification in Earth and Venus cores, and how impacts can disrupt this to enable dynamo activity.
Findings
Earth's core likely experienced a late giant impact that stirred the core.
Venus's core remains stably stratified due to lack of such impacts.
Stable stratification inhibits magnetic field generation in Venus.
Abstract
Earth possesses a persistent, internally-generated magnetic field, whereas no trace of a dynamo has been detected on Venus, at present or in the past, although a high surface temperature and recent resurfacing events may have removed paleomagnetic evidence. Whether or not a terrestrial body can sustain an internally generated magnetic field by convection inside its metallic fluid core is determined in part by its initial thermodynamic state and its compositional structure, both of which are in turn set by the processes of accretion and differentiation. Here we show that the cores of Earth- and Venus-like planets should grow with stable compositional stratification unless disturbed by late energetic impacts. They do so because higher abundances of light elements are incorporated into the liquid metal that sinks to form the core as the temperatures and pressures of metal-silicate…
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