Gravity-dominated Collisions: A Model for the Largest Remnant Masses with Treatment for “Hit and Run” and Density Stratification

Author:

Gabriel Travis S. J.ORCID,Jackson Alan P.ORCID,Asphaug ErikORCID,Reufer Andreas,Jutzi MartinORCID,Benz Willy

Abstract

Abstract We develop empirical relationships for the accretion and erosion of colliding gravity-dominated bodies of various compositions under conditions expected in late-stage solar system formation. These are fast, easily coded relationships based on a large database of smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of collisions between bodies of different compositions, including those that are water rich. The accuracy of these relations is also comparable to the deviations of results between different SPH codes and initial thermal/rotational conditions. We illustrate the paucity of disruptive collisions between major bodies, as compared to collisions between less massive planetesimals in late-stage planet formation, and thus focus on more probable, low-velocity collisions, though our relations remain relevant to disruptive collisions as well. We also pay particular attention to the transition zone between merging collisions and those where the impactor does not merge with the target, but continues downrange, a “hit-and-run” collision. We find that hit-and-run collisions likely occur more often in density-stratified bodies and across a wider range of impact angles than suggested by the most commonly used analytic approximation. We also identify a possible transitional zone in gravity-dominated collisions where larger bodies may undergo more disruptive collisions when the impact velocity exceeds the sound speed, though understanding this transition warrants further study. Our results are contrary to the commonly assumed invariance of total mass (scale), density structure, and material composition on the largest remnants of giant impacts. We provide an algorithm for adopting our model into N-body planet formation simulations, so that the mass of growing planets and debris can be tracked.

Funder

NASA

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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2. Formation of super-Mercuries via giant impacts;Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society;2024-03-04

3. A New Database of Giant Impacts over a Wide Range of Masses and with Material Strength: A First Analysis of Outcomes;The Planetary Science Journal;2024-03-01

4. The Role of Giant Impacts in Planet Formation;Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences;2023-05-31

5. Impact Generation of Holes in the Early Lunar Crust: Scaling Relations;Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets;2023-04

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