Forming equal mass planetary binaries via pebble accretion
T.J. Konijn, R.G. Visser, C. Dominik, C.W. Ormel

TL;DR
This paper investigates how pebble accretion influences the mass ratios of binary planetary systems, showing that it tends to equalize masses, which explains the formation of systems like Pluto-Charon with near-equal mass components.
Contribution
The study provides a numerical analysis demonstrating that pebble accretion naturally drives binary systems toward equal mass ratios, offering a new explanation for observed binary characteristics.
Findings
Pebble accretion favors secondary collision, leading to equal mass ratios.
Total accretion efficiency can be reduced by half compared to single bodies.
Equal mass binaries like Pluto-Charon can form via pebble accretion without diverging mass ratios.
Abstract
Binary solar system objects are common and range from satellite systems with very large mass ratios to mass ratios very close to unity. A well-known example of a binary is the Pluto-Charon system. With Charon only eight times less massive than Pluto the question arises as for many other systems, why the mass-ratio is still close to unity. There is much evidence that (binary) planet(esimal) formation happened early, when the protoplanetary gas disk was still around. It is likely that (some of) these binaries grew up together subject to pebble accretion. Here we focus on the question of how the mass arriving in the gravitational influence zone of the binary during pebble accretion, is distributed over the binary components. Does the accretion through time lead to a converging mass ratio, or to a diverging mass ratio? We numerically integrate pebble paths in the same well-known…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
