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Growing Mars fast: High-resolution GPU simulations of embryo formation

Recent high precision meteoritic data improve constraints on the formation timescale and bulk composition of the terrestrial planets. High resolution N-body simulations allow direct comparison of embryo growth timescale and accretion zones to these constraints. In this paper, we present results of high resolution simulations for embryo formation from a disc of up to 41,000 fully-self gravitating planetesimals with the GPU-based N-body code GENGA. Our results indicate that the growth of embryos are highly dependent on the initial conditions. More massive initial planetesimals, a shorter gas disc decay timescale and initially eccentric Jupiter and Saturn (EJS) all lead to faster growth of embryos. Asteroid belt material can thereby be implanted into the terrestrial planet region via sweeping secular resonances. This could possibly explain the rapid growth of Mars within 10 Myr inferred from its Hf-W chronology. The sweeping secular resonance almost completely clears the asteroid belt and deposits this material in the Mercury-Venus region, altering the composition of embryos there. This could result in embryos in the Mercury-Venus region accreting an unexpectedly high mass fraction from beyond 2 AU. Changing the initial orbits of Jupiter and Saturn to more circular (CJS) or assuming embryos formed in a gas free environment removes the sweeping secular resonance effect and thus greatly decreases material accreted from beyond 2 AU for Mercury-Venus region embryos. We therefore propose that rock samples from Mercury and Venus could aid greatly in deducing the condition and lifetime of the initial protoplanetary gas disc during planetesimal and embryo formation, as well as the initial architecture of the giant planets.

preprint2021arXivOpen access
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