Anatomy of rocky planets formed by rapid pebble accretion I. How icy pebbles determine the core fraction and FeO contents
Anders Johansen (University of Copenhagen, Lund Observatory), Thomas, Ronnet (Lund Observatory), Martin Schiller (University of Copenhagen),, Zhengbin Deng (University of Copenhagen), Martin Bizzarro (University of, Copenhagen)

TL;DR
This paper models how icy pebbles influence the core and mantle composition of rocky planets formed by pebble accretion, highlighting the role of water and iron oxidation in planetary differentiation.
Contribution
It introduces a new model linking icy pebble composition to planetary core fraction and FeO content during planet formation.
Findings
Water flow and clay formation inside planetesimals due to heating.
Iron dissolves in water and precipitates as magnetite during differentiation.
Higher planetary mass correlates with increased core mass fraction and lower FeO content.
Abstract
We present a series of papers dedicated to modelling the accretion and differentiation of rocky planets that form by pebble accretion within the lifetime of the protoplanetary disc. In this first paper, we focus on how the accreted ice determines the distribution of iron between the mantle (oxidized FeO and FeO) and the core (metallic Fe and FeS). We find that an initial primitive composition of ice-rich material leads, upon heating by the decay of Al, to extensive water flow and the formation of clay minerals inside planetesimals. Metallic iron dissolves in liquid water and precipitates as oxidized magnetite FeO. Further heating by Al destabilizes the clay at a temperature of around 900 K. The released supercritical water ejects the entire water content from the planetesimal. Upon reaching the silicate melting temperature of 1,700 K, planetesimals further…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Planetary Science and Exploration
