The Delivery of Water During Terrestrial Planet Formation
David P. O'Brien, Andre Izidoro, Seth A. Jacobson, Sean N. Raymond and, David C. Rubie

TL;DR
This paper reviews mechanisms for water delivery to terrestrial planets, emphasizing accretion from beyond the snow line via classical and Grand Tack scenarios, and discusses their implications for Earth's water origin.
Contribution
It compares classical and Grand Tack models for water delivery, highlighting their effectiveness and limitations in explaining Earth's water content.
Findings
Both scenarios can deliver sufficient water to terrestrial planets.
The Grand Tack scenario better explains the small mass of Mars.
Planet formation may occur faster than current models suggest.
Abstract
The planetary building blocks that formed in the terrestrial planet region were likely very dry, yet water is comparatively abundant on Earth. We review the various mechanisms proposed for the origin of water on the terrestrial planets. Various in-situ mechanisms have been suggested, which allow for the incorporation of water into the local planetesimals in the terrestrial planet region or into the planets themselves from local sources, although all of those mechanisms have difficulties. Comets have also been proposed as a source, although there may be problems fitting isotopic constraints, and the delivery efficiency is very low, such that it may be difficult to deliver even a single Earth ocean of water this way. The most promising route for water delivery is the accretion of material from beyond the snow line, similar to carbonaceous chondrites, that is scattered into the terrestrial…
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.
