Connecting Planetary Composition with Formation
Ralph E. Pudritz, Alex J. Cridland, Matthew Alessi

TL;DR
This review explores how planetary compositions are linked to their formation processes, integrating observational data, disk chemistry, and planet migration theories into a comprehensive model.
Contribution
It synthesizes current knowledge into an end-to-end framework connecting planetary chemistry with formation mechanisms.
Findings
Disk chemistry driven by X-ray ionization influences planet composition
Planet migration and traps affect elemental distribution in planets
A coherent model linking observations, disk processes, and planet formation is proposed
Abstract
The rapid advances in observations of the different populations of exoplanets, the characterization of their host stars and the links to the properties of their planetary systems, the detailed studies of protoplanetary disks, and the experimental study of the interiors and composition of the massive planets in our solar system provide a firm basis for the next big question in planet formation theory. How do the elemental and chemical compositions of planets connect with their formation? The answer to this requires that the various pieces of planet formation theory be linked together in an end-to-end picture that is capable of addressing these large data sets. In this review, we discuss the critical elements of such a picture and how they affect the chemical and elemental make up of forming planets. Important issues here include the initial state of forming and evolving disks, chemical…
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