Metal-silicate mixing in planetesimal collisions
Kang Shuai, Christoph M. Sch\"afer, Christoph Burger, Hejiu Hui

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how impacts between differentiated planetesimals can mix metal and silicate materials, shedding light on the formation of stony-iron meteorites and asteroid Psyche.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of impact conditions that lead to metal-silicate mixing, including the effects of core states and impact energies.
Findings
Molten cores facilitate metal-silicate mixing.
Low-energy impacts produce significant mixtures.
Most metal-silicate material is buried at depth.
Abstract
Impacts between differentiated planetesimals are ubiquitous in protoplanetary discs and may mix materials from the core, mantle, and crust of planetesimals, thus forming stony-iron meteorites. The surface composition of the asteroid (16) Psyche represents a mixture of metal and non-metal components. However, the velocities, angles, and outcome regimes of impacts that mixed metal and silicate from different layers of planetesimals are debated. Our aim is to investigate the impacts between planetesimals that can mix large amounts of metal and silicate, and the mechanism of stony-iron meteorite formation. We used smooth particle hydrodynamics to simulate the impacts between differentiated planetesimals with various initial conditions that span different outcome regimes. In our simulations, the material strength was included and the effects of the states of planetesimal cores were studied.…
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