The possibility of a giant impact on Venus
Mirco Bussmann, Christian Reinhardt, Cedric Gillmann, Thomas Meier, Joachim Stadel, Paul Tackley, Ravit Helled

TL;DR
This study investigates whether a giant impact could explain Venus's current rotation and lack of a moon, using simulations of various impact scenarios to match observed planetary characteristics.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of impact scenarios consistent with Venus's rotation and satellite absence using smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations.
Findings
Impact scenarios can reproduce Venus's current rotation.
Most impacts produce debris that reaccretes, explaining the absence of a moon.
Impact conditions vary, but many are consistent with Venus's observed state.
Abstract
Giant impacts were common in the early evolution of the Solar System, and it is possible that Venus also experienced an impact. A giant impact on Venus could have affected its rotation rate and possibly its thermal evolution. In this work, we explore a range of possible impacts using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH). We consider the final major collision, assuming that differentiation already occurred and that Venus consists of an iron core (30% of Venus' mass) and a forsterite mantle (70% of Venus' mass). We use differentiated impactors with masses ranging from 0.01 to 0.1 Earth masses, impact velocities between 10 and 15 km/s, various impact geometries (head-on and oblique), different primordial thermal profiles, and a range of pre-impact rotation rates of Venus. We analyse the post-impact rotation periods and debris disc masses to identify scenarios that can reproduce Venus'…
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