Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy
Scientific paper
Oct 2010
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2010dps....42.0206h&link_type=abstract
American Astronomical Society, DPS meeting #42, #2.06; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 42, p.944
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astronomy
Scientific paper
The extraordinary number of different parent bodies of iron meteorite, and the dearth of asteroids and meteorites derived from the silicate mantles and crusts of these objects is better understood if these bodies accreted at 1-2 AU during the first 2 Myr when 26Al melted all ice-free planetesimals larger than 20-km. It has been suggested that planetary embryos at 1-2 AU dynamically excited the differentiated planetesimals and scattered their fragments into the asteroid belt where they were captured by planetary embryos. The scattering and accretion of planetesimals has occurred during the time that giant planets were growing. If the timescale for the formation of giant planets is comparable with the time of the accretion of parent bodies of iron meteorites (e.g. as short as in the
recent version of the core-accretion model), or if it is as small as suggested by the disk instability scenario, the perturbation of growing giant planet(s) may affect the scattering, collision, and accretion of planetesimals. We have studied these effects in order to compare the results with meteoritic data to constrain the time of giant planet formation. We have numerically integrated the motions, collisions, and accretion of a large battery of planetesimals and planetary embryos in the region between 0.5 and 4 AU during the growth of two giant planets in orbits of Jupiter and Saturn. Results indicate that the perturbations of growing giant planets decrease the efficiency of planetesimals scattering when these objects grow to approximately 50 Earth-masses. For larger values of mass, this efficiency drops drastically suggesting that very short timescales for the growth of giant planets may not be favorable for models of the formation of the parent bodies of iron meteorites. We present the results of our simulations and discuss their implications for the time of giant planet formation.
Haghighipour Nader
Jeffrey Taylor G.
O'Brien Darren
Scott Edward R. D.
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