A chemical perspective on planet formation in reduced systems
Urja Zaveri, Haiyang S. Wang, Paolo A. Sossi

TL;DR
This study examines how variations in stellar C/O ratios and disk pressure influence planetary formation chemistry, revealing that elemental ratios often used as indicators may not reliably reflect planetary compositions in reduced environments.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed chemical model showing how condensation sequences vary with stellar C/O ratios, challenging assumptions of universal refractory element behavior.
Findings
Condensation sequences differ significantly across C/O regimes.
Bulk planetary compositions deviate from stellar abundances in reduced systems.
Reduced environments can produce metal-rich and C- and S-rich planets.
Abstract
Relative abundances of refractory elements in planets are commonly assumed to reflect those of their host stars. However, because elements are classified according to their behaviour in the solar nebula, this implicitly assumes condensation is independent of nebular chemistry, despite evidence to the contrary in chemically reduced systems with high molar carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) ratios. We investigate how variations in stellar C/O ratio and disk pressure modify condensation chemistry and assess the reliability of mapping stellar compositions to planetary building blocks in reduced environments. For a sample of FGK stars with C/O ratios spanning 0.65-0.95 (solar = 0.50), we compute equilibrium phase stability using FactSage over 1900-400 K at total pressures of 1e-2, 1e-4, and 1e-6 bar. Bulk planetesimal compositions are derived using a stochastic accretion framework aggregating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
