Formation of moon systems around giant planets: Capture and ablation of planetesimals as foundation for a pebble accretion scenario
Thomas Ronnet, Anders Johansen

TL;DR
This paper models how planetesimals are captured and ablated in circum-planetary disks, leading to pebble formation and moon accretion, explaining the diverse moon system architectures of Jupiter and Saturn.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework combining ablation-driven dust supply and pebble accretion to explain moon formation around giant planets.
Findings
Most captured planetesimals are ablated, supplying dust for pebble formation.
Protosatellites rapidly migrate and form resonant chains.
Dynamical instabilities in chains explain moon system differences.
Abstract
The four major satellites of Jupiter, known as the Galilean moons, and Saturn's most massive satellite, Titan, are believed to have formed in a predominantly gaseous circum-planetary disk, during the last stages of formation of their parent planet. Pebbles from the protoplanetary disk are blocked from flowing into the circumplanetary disk by the positive pressure gradient at the outer edge of the planetary gap, so the gas drag assisted capture of planetesimals should be the main contributor to the delivery of solids onto circum-planetary disks. However, a consistent framework for the subsequent accretion of the moons remains to be built. Here we use numerical integrations to show that most planetesimals being captured within a circum-planetary disk are strongly ablated due to the frictional heating they experience, thus supplying the disk with small dust grains, whereas only a small…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
