The fragility of the Uranian moons during the giant planet instability
Matthew S. Clement, Nathan A. Kaib, Andre Izidoro, Rogerio Deienno

TL;DR
This study models the effects of giant planet instability on the stability of Uranus and Jupiter's moons, finding that such events likely led to the destruction or perturbation of these satellite systems.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of how giant planet encounters during instability phases threaten the survival of regular moons, especially around Uranus and Jupiter.
Findings
Survival probability for Uranus and Jupiter moons is less than 15%.
Most instabilities result in moon system destruction or severe perturbation.
Uranus' moons likely experienced collisions during planetary instability.
Abstract
It is thought that, sometime after their formation, the solar system's giant planets experienced a dynamical instability that caused their orbits to excite, diverge, and ejected one or more objects with masses comparable to the ice giants. A key feature of this model is that the planets experience encounters with other planetary bodies, and these encounters facilitate the capture of nearby small bodies as irregular satellites. Instability simulations indicate that planet-planet encounter distances can typically fall below 0.1 au, which is only roughly an order of magnitude larger than the radial extent of the modern planets' regular satellite systems. In this paper we model the effects of these encounters on the dynamical stability of the regular moons of Jupiter and Uranus. We tested encounter histories from 122 plausible outer solar system dynamical histories. We find that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Paleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils
