Growth of Jupiter: Enhancement of core accretion by a voluminous low-mass envelope
Abstract
We present calculations of the early stages of the formation of Jupiter via core nucleated accretion and gas capture. The core begins as a seed body of about 350 km in radius and orbits in a swarm of planetesimals whose initial radii range from 15 m to 50 km. The evolution of the swarm accounts for growth and fragmentation, viscous and gravitational stirring, and for drag-assisted migration and velocity damping. During this evolution, less than 9% of the mass is in planetesimals smaller than 1 km in radius; ≲25% is in planetesimals with radii between 1 and 10 km; and ≲7% is in bodies with radii larger than 100 km. Gas capture by the core substantially enhances the size-dependent cross-section of the planet for accretion of planetesimals. The calculation of dust opacity in the planet's envelope accounts for coagulation and sedimentation of dust particles released as planetesimals are ablated. The calculation is carried out at an orbital semi-major axis of 5.2 AU and the initial solids' surface density is 10 g cm-2 at that distance. The results give a core mass of nearly 7.3 Earth masses (M⊕) and an envelope mass of ≈0.15 M⊕ after about 4×105 years, at which point the envelope growth rate surpasses that of the core. The same calculation without the envelope yields a core of only about 4.4 M⊕.
- Publication:
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Icarus
- Pub Date:
- October 2014
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1405.7305
- Bibcode:
- 2014Icar..241..298D
- Keywords:
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- Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- Published in the journal Icarus. Final version