Impact splash chondrule formation during planetesimal recycling
Tim Lichtenberg (ETH Zurich), Gregor J. Golabek (BGI Bayreuth),, Cornelis P. Dullemond (Heidelberg University), Maria Sch\"onb\"achler (ETH, Zurich), Taras V. Gerya (ETH Zurich), Michael R. Meyer (University of, Michigan)

TL;DR
This study investigates whether chondrules could have formed from planetesimal collisions, revealing that partially molten planetesimals are likely sources, thus constraining early solar system dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled evolution-collision model showing that most chondrule precursors originated from partially molten planetesimals, refining formation scenarios.
Findings
Most collisional debris came from partially molten planetesimals.
Small, sub-canonical aluminum-26 reservoirs likely formed chondrite precursors.
Collisional destruction prevented some planetesimals from reaching magma oceans.
Abstract
Chondrules are the dominant bulk silicate constituent of chondritic meteorites and originate from highly energetic, local processes during the first million years after the birth of the Sun. So far, an astrophysically consistent chondrule formation scenario, explaining major chemical, isotopic and textural features, remains elusive. Here, we examine the prospect of forming chondrules from planetesimal collisions. We show that intensely melted bodies with interior magma oceans became rapidly chemically equilibrated and physically differentiated. Therefore, collisional interactions among such bodies would have resulted in chondrule-like but basaltic spherules, which are not observed in the meteoritic record. This inconsistency with the expected dynamical interactions hints at an incomplete understanding of the planetary growth regime during the protoplanetary disk phase. To resolve this…
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.
