Growth of Jupiter: Formation in Disks of Gas and Solids and Evolution to the Present Epoch
Gennaro D'Angelo, Stuart J. Weidenschilling, Jack J. Lissauer, Peter, Bodenheimer

TL;DR
This paper models Jupiter's formation via core accretion, simulating its growth from embryo to present, and examines its evolution, luminosity, and size changes over billions of years, highlighting observable features during early stages.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, time-resolved model of Jupiter's formation and evolution, integrating disk dynamics and planetary cooling, which advances understanding of giant planet development.
Findings
Jupiter's formation completes in about 3.4-4.2 million years.
Young Jupiter was significantly larger and more luminous than today.
Observable features of early Jupiter may help probe formation processes.
Abstract
[Abridged] The formation of Jupiter is modeled via core-nucleated accretion, and the planet's evolution is simulated up to the present epoch. The growth from a small embryo until gas accretion overtakes solids' accretion was presented by D'Angelo et al. (Icarus 2014, 241, 298). Those calculations followed the formation for years, until the heavy-element and H/He masses were and Earth's masses (), respectively, and . The calculation is continued through the phase when , at which age, about years, the planet mass is . About years later, is approximately and . Around this epoch, the contraction of the envelope dictates gas accretion rates a few times…
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