Recipes for forming a carbon-rich giant planet
Olivier Mousis, Thibault Cavali\'e, Jonathan I. Lunine, Kathleen E., Mandt, Ricardo Hueso, Artyom Aguichine, Antoine Schneeberger, Tom Benest, Couzinou, David H. Atkinson, Vincent Hue, Mark Hofstadter, and Udomlerd, Srisuchinwong

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current understanding of the carbon-to-oxygen ratio in the solar system's giant planets, discusses formation scenarios for carbon-rich giants, and highlights challenges in accurately measuring their bulk compositions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the formation scenarios for carbon-rich giant planets and discusses the limitations of current measurement techniques.
Findings
Current measurements are limited to 10-100 bar pressure range.
No definitive evidence confirms the giants as carbon-rich planets.
Three main formation scenarios are analyzed for high C/O ratios.
Abstract
The exploration of carbon-to-oxygen ratios has yielded intriguing insights into the composition of close-in giant exoplanets, giving rise to a distinct classification: carbon-rich planets, characterized by a carbon-to-oxygen ratio 1 in their atmospheres, as opposed to giant planets exhibiting carbon-to-oxygen ratios close to the protosolar value. In contrast, despite numerous space missions dispatched to the outer solar system and the proximity of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, our understanding of the carbon-to-oxygen ratio in these giants remains notably deficient. Determining this ratio is crucial as it serves as a marker linking a planet's volatile composition directly to its formation region within the disk. This article provides an overview of the current understanding of the carbon-to-oxygen ratio in the four gas giants of our solar system and explores why there is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life
