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The Formation of Uranus and Neptune: Fine-tuning in Core Accretion

Journal Article · · The Astronomical Journal (Online)
Uranus and Neptune are ice giants with ∼15% atmospheres by mass, which places them in a category intermediate between rocky planets and gas giants. These atmospheres are too massive to have been primarily outgassed, but they never underwent runaway gas accretion. The ice giants never reached critical core mass (M{sub crit}) in a full gas disk, but their cores are ≳M{sub crit}, suggesting that their envelopes were mainly accreted at the end of the disk lifetime. Pebble accretion calls into question traditional slow atmospheric growth during this phase. We show that the full-sized ice giants predominantly accreted gas from a disk depleted by at least a factor of ∼100. Such a disk dissipates in ≲10{sup 5} years. Why would both cores stay subcritical for the entire ∼Myr disk lifetime, only to reach M{sub crit} in the final 10{sup 5} years? This is fine tuned. Ice giants in the outer disk have atmospheric mass fractions comparable to the disk gas-to-solid ratio during the bulk of their gas accretion. This point in disk evolution coincides with a dynamical upheaval: the gas loses its ability to efficiently damp the core random velocities, allowing them to be gravitationally excited by Jupiter and Saturn. We suggest that the ice giants’ cores began growing on closer-in orbits (staying subcritical), and migrated out during this dynamical instability. There, their orbits circularized after accreting much of their mass in solids. Finally, they accreted their envelopes from a depleted nebula, where the sparseness of feeding-zone gas prevented runaway.
OSTI ID:
22863040
Journal Information:
The Astronomical Journal (Online), Journal Name: The Astronomical Journal (Online) Journal Issue: 3 Vol. 154; ISSN 1538-3881
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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