Separating gas-giant and ice-giant planets by halting pebble accretion

被引:347
|
作者
Lambrechts, M. [1 ]
Johansen, A. [1 ]
Morbidelli, A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Lund Univ, Lund Observ, Dept Astron & Theoret Phys, S-22100 Lund, Sweden
[2] OCA, CNRS, UNSA, Dept Lagrange, Nice, France
基金
瑞典研究理事会; 欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
planets and satellites: formation; planets and satellites: gaseous planets; planets and satellites: composition; planets and satellites: interiors; protoplanetary disks; DISK TURBULENCE DRIVEN; PROTOPLANETARY DISKS; SOLAR NEBULA; LOW-MASS; COLLISIONAL FRAGMENTATION; PARTICLE CONCENTRATION; STREAMING INSTABILITY; CIRCUMSTELLAR DISKS; FORMATION MECHANISM; EMBEDDED PLANETS;
D O I
10.1051/0004-6361/201423814
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
In the solar system giant planets come in two flavours: gas giants (Jupiter and Saturn) with massive gas envelopes, and ice giants (Uranus and Neptune) with much thinner envelopes around their cores. It is poorly understood how these two classes of planets formed. High solid accretion rates, necessary to form the cores of giant planets within the life-time of protoplanetary discs, heat the envelope and prevent rapid gas contraction onto the core, unless accretion is halted. We find that, in fact, accretion of pebbles (similar to cm sized particles) is self-limiting: when a core becomes massive enough it carves a gap in the pebble disc. This halt in pebble accretion subsequently triggers the rapid collapse of the super-critical gas envelope. Unlike gas giants, ice giants do not reach this threshold mass and can only bind low-mass envelopes that are highly enriched by water vapour from sublimated icy pebbles. This offers an explanation for the compositional difference between gas giants and ice giants in the solar system. Furthermore, unlike planetesimal-driven accretion scenarios, our model allows core formation and envelope attraction within disc life-times, provided that solids in protoplanetary discs are predominantly made up of pebbles. Our results imply that the outer regions of planetary systems, where the mass required to halt pebble accretion is large, are dominated by ice giants and that gas-giant exoplanets in wide orbits are enriched by more than 50 Earth masses of solids.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Rapid growth of gas-giant cores by pebble accretion
    Lambrechts, M.
    Johansen, A.
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2012, 544
  • [2] The fate of planetary cores in giant and ice-giant planets
    Mazevet, S.
    Musella, R.
    Guyot, F.
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2019, 631
  • [3] Changes in the metallicity of gas giant planets due to pebble accretion
    Humphries, R. J.
    Nayakshin, S.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 477 (01) : 593 - 615
  • [4] Deep jets on gas-giant planets
    Lian, Yuan
    Showman, Adam P.
    ICARUS, 2008, 194 (02) : 597 - 615
  • [5] Gas capturing growth of gas-giant planets via subdisk accretion in protoplanetary disk
    Tanigawa, T
    Watanabe, SI
    SCIENTIFIC FRONTIERS IN RESEARCH ON EXTRASOLAR PLANETS, 2003, 294 : 303 - 306
  • [6] How to make giant planets via pebble accretion
    Savvidou S.
    Bitsch B.
    Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2023, 679
  • [7] Growing the gas-giant planets by the gradual accumulation of pebbles
    Levison, Harold F.
    Kretke, Katherine A.
    Duncan, Martin J.
    NATURE, 2015, 524 (7565) : 322 - +
  • [8] Growing the gas-giant planets by the gradual accumulation of pebbles
    Harold F. Levison
    Katherine A. Kretke
    Martin J. Duncan
    Nature, 2015, 524 : 322 - 324
  • [9] A balanced budget view on forming giant planets by pebble accretion
    Lin, Jonathan W.
    Lee, Eve J.
    Chiang, Eugene
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 480 (04) : 4338 - 4354
  • [10] Probing the impact of varied migration and gas accretion rates for the formation of giant planets in the pebble accretion scenario
    Ndugu, N.
    Bitsch, B.
    Morbidelli, A.
    Crida, A.
    Jurua, E.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2021, 501 (02) : 2017 - 2028