Accretion of Uranus and Neptune: confronting different giant impact scenarios
Leandro Esteves, Andr\'e Izidoro, Othon C. Winter

TL;DR
This study compares different giant impact scenarios for Uranus and Neptune's formation through N-body simulations, analyzing their effects on planetary mass, obliquity, and rotation, and finds similar probabilities for both models.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive simulation-based comparison of impact scenarios with different impactor mass ratios, assessing their likelihood to produce Uranus and Neptune's observed properties.
Findings
Large impactor mass ratio scenarios produce more realistic rotation periods.
Low probability (~0.1-1%) of matching observed planetary properties in both scenarios.
Gas tidal damping less effective for low-mass embryos, affecting collision outcomes.
Abstract
The origins of Uranus and Neptune are not fully understood. Their inclined rotation axes -- obliquities -- suggest that they experienced giant impacts during their formation histories. Simulations modeling their accretion from giant impacts among ~5 Earth masses planetary embryos -- with roughly unity impactors' mass ratios -- have been able to broadly match their current masses, final mass ratio, and obliquity. However, due to angular momentum conservation, planets produced in these impacts tend to rotate too fast, compared to Uranus and Neptune. One potential solution for this problem consists of invoking instead collisions of objects with large mass ratios (e.g. a proto-Uranus with 13 Mearth and an embryo of 1 Mearth). Smooth-particle hydrodynamics simulations show that in this scenario final planets tend to have rotation periods more consistent with those of Uranus and Neptune. Here…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space Exploration and Technology
