Formation of Venus, Earth and Mars: Constrained by isotopes
H. Lammer, R. Brasser, A. Johansen, M. Scherf, M. Leitzinger

TL;DR
This paper reviews isotopic data and models to understand the formation timelines and processes of Venus, Earth, and Mars, highlighting the potential of pebble accretion to resolve longstanding growth time scale issues.
Contribution
It synthesizes isotopic evidence with formation models, emphasizing pebble accretion's role in early planetary growth and proposing N-body simulations for further insights.
Findings
Earth's bulk most likely accreted within 10-30 Myr.
Proto-Earth accreted 0.5-0.6 Earth masses in 4-5 Myr.
Venus could have grown to 0.85-1.0 Venus masses before disk dissipation.
Abstract
We discuss the current state of knowledge of terrestrial planet formation from the aspects of different planet formation models and isotopic data from 182Hf-182W, U-Pb, lithophile-siderophile elements, 48Ca/44Ca isotope samples from planetary building blocks, 36Ar/38Ar, 20Ne/22Ne, 36Ar/22Ne isotope ratios in Venus' and Earth's atmospheres, the expected solar 3He abundance in Earth's deep mantle and Earth's D/H sea water ratios that shed light on the accretion time of the early protoplanets. Accretion scenarios that can explain the different isotope ratios, including a Moon-forming event after ca. 50 Myr, support the theory that the bulk of Earth's mass (>80%) most likely accreted within 10-30 Myr. From a combined analysis of the before mentioned isotopes, one finds that proto-Earth accreted 0.5-0.6 MEarth within the first ~4-5 Myr, the approximate lifetime of the protoplanetary disk.…
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