Rethinking the role of the giant planet instability in terrestrial planet formation models
Matthew S. Clement, Rogerio Deienno, Andre Izidoro

TL;DR
This study investigates how the timing of giant planet instability affects terrestrial planet formation, finding that a later instability (after 50 Myr) is less consistent with forming Mars and Mercury analogs.
Contribution
It explores the effects of a late giant planet instability on terrestrial planet formation, challenging previous assumptions about its timing and impact.
Findings
Late instability leads to overly excited systems lacking Mars and Mercury analogs.
Earlier instability scenarios are more consistent with observed planetary configurations.
Simulations show the timing of giant planet instability critically influences terrestrial planet outcomes.
Abstract
Advances in computing power and numerical methodologies over the past several decades sparked a prolific output of dynamical investigations of the late stages of terrestrial planet formation. Among other peculiar inner solar system qualities, the ability of simulations to reproduce the small mass of Mars within the planets' geochemically inferred accretion timescale of <10 Myr after the appearance of calcium aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs) is arguably considered the gold standard for judging evolutionary hypotheses. At present, a number of independent models are capable of consistently generating Mars-like planets and simultaneously satisfying various important observational and geochemical constraints. However, all models must still account for the effects of the epoch of giant planet migration and orbital instability; an event which dynamical and cosmochemical constraints indicate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Paleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
