Nucleation and growth of iron pebbles explains the formation of iron-rich planets akin to Mercury
Anders Johansen (GLOBE Institute, University of Copenhagen, Lund, Observatory, Lund University), Caroline Dorn (Institute of Computational, Sciences, University of Zurich)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new model where iron-rich planets like Mercury form through nucleation and growth of iron pebbles in the protoplanetary disc, avoiding the need for mantle-stripping impacts.
Contribution
It introduces a nucleation-based mechanism explaining the high iron content in Mercury and similar planets, emphasizing chemical separation during disc cooling.
Findings
Iron particles nucleate homogeneously at high supersaturation
Large iron pebbles form via depositional growth from sparse nano-particles
Chemical separation leads to iron-rich planetesimals without mantle stripping
Abstract
The pathway to forming the iron-rich planet Mercury remains mysterious. Mercury's core makes up 70% of the planetary mass, which implies a significant enrichment of iron relative to silicates, while its mantle is strongly depleted in oxidized iron. The high core mass fraction is traditionally ascribed to evaporative loss of silicates, e.g. following a giant impact, but the high abundance of moderately volatile elements in the mantle of Mercury is inconsistent with reaching temperatures much above 1,000 K during its formation. Here we explore the nucleation of solid particles from a gas of solar composition that cools down in the hot inner regions of the protoplanetary disc. The high surface tension of iron causes iron particles to nucleate homogeneously (i.e., not on a more refractory substrate) under very high supersaturation. The low nucleation rates lead to depositional growth of…
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