The early instability scenario: Mars' mass explained by Jupiter's orbit
Matthew S. Clement, Nathan A. Kaib, Sean N. Raymond, John E., Chambers

TL;DR
This study investigates how an early dynamical instability involving Jupiter and Saturn could explain the small mass of Mars and other solar system features, using extensive simulations aligned with recent planet formation models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the early instability scenario, especially with a primordial 2:1 Jupiter-Saturn resonance, effectively reproduces key solar system characteristics in detailed simulations.
Findings
Early instability truncates terrestrial planet disk outside Earth
Primordial 2:1 Jupiter-Saturn resonance is a viable evolutionary path
Many simulations produce solar system analogs matching observational constraints
Abstract
The formation of the solar system's giant planets predated the ultimate epoch of massive impacts that concluded the process of terrestrial planet formation. Following their formation, the giant planets' orbits evolved through an episode of dynamical instability. Several qualities of the solar system have recently been interpreted as evidence of this event transpiring within the first ~100 Myr after the Sun's birth; around the same time as the final assembly of the inner planets. In a series of recent papers we argued that such an early instability could resolve several problems revealed in classic numerical studies of terrestrial planet formation; namely the small masses of Mars and the asteroid belt. In this paper, we revisit the early instability scenario with a large suite of simulations specifically designed to understand the degree to which Earth and Mars' formation are sensitive…
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