论文标题
行星行星碰撞的气氛损失
Atmosphere loss in planet-planet collisions
论文作者
论文摘要
开普勒卫星发现的许多行星都是近距离轨道的超级地球或迷你纽扣。此类物体对类似质量表现出广泛的密度。对这种密度差的一种可能的解释是巨大的碰撞剥夺了其大气的行星。在本文中,我们介绍了一系列平滑的颗粒流体动力学(SPH)模拟行星正面碰撞的模拟,具有重要的气氛和裸露的弹丸,没有大气。行星之间的碰撞可以具有足够的能量,可以从目标行星中去除质量的大量部分。我们发现,质量损失的分裂分为两种状态 - 在低冲击能量下,只有外层被喷出,与大气占主导的损失相对应,在电势更深的较高能量材料下,发掘了巨大的核心和地幔损失。与核心和地幔损失方案相比,由于大气相对于核心和地幔的较高可压缩性,与核心和地幔损失方案相比,质量的去除效率较低。我们发现在两个政权之间的过渡中,大约有20%的气氛仍然存在。我们发现,对于所有测量的弹丸目标质量比,该过渡的特定能量与弹丸与靶质量的比率线性缩放。在特定能量和过渡能的比率方面,二次损失的大气损失的比例很好。我们为将缩放定律纳入未来的数值研究提供了算法。
Many of the planets discovered by the Kepler satellite are close orbiting Super-Earths or Mini-Neptunes. Such objects exhibit a wide spread of densities for similar masses. One possible explanation for this density spread is giant collisions stripping planets of their atmospheres. In this paper we present the results from a series of smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of head-on collisions of planets with significant atmospheres and bare projectiles without atmospheres. Collisions between planets can have sufficient energy to remove substantial fractions of the mass from the target planet. We find the fraction of mass lost splits into two regimes -- at low impact energies only the outer layers are ejected corresponding to atmosphere dominated loss, at higher energies material deeper in the potential is excavated resulting in significant core and mantle loss. Mass removal is less efficient in the atmosphere loss dominated regime compared to the core and mantle loss regime, due to the higher compressibility of atmosphere relative to core and mantle. We find roughly twenty per cent atmosphere remains at the transition between the two regimes. We find that the specific energy of this transition scales linearly with the ratio of projectile to target mass for all projectile-target mass ratios measured. The fraction of atmosphere lost is well approximated by a quadratic in terms of the ratio of specific energy and transition energy. We provide algorithms for the incorporation of our scaling law into future numerical studies.