巨大撞击中的大气损耗取决于撞击前的地表状况

S. Lock, Sarah T. Stewart
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摘要

地球可能是在其形成的主要阶段获得了大部分挥发性元素。因此,地球的一些原大气层一定是在巨型撞击(行星大小的天体之间的碰撞)中幸存下来的,而这种撞击在地球增生的后期阶段占主导地位。在这里,我们利用一套一维流体力学模拟和阻抗匹配计算来量化撞击前表面条件(如大气压力和海洋的存在)对巨型撞击期间原行星大气和海洋流失效率的影响。我们发现,在没有海洋的情况下,较轻、较热和压力较低的大气更容易流失。与没有海洋的情况相比,海洋的存在会大大提高大气流失的效率,随着大气与海洋质量比的降低,低流失率与高流失率之间会迅速过渡。然而,与之前的想法相反,如果海洋的质量不够大(通常小于大气质量的几倍),海洋的存在也会减少大气损耗。因此,巨型撞击导致的挥发物损失对碰撞天体的表面条件非常敏感。为了将我们的结果与三维撞击模拟相结合,我们开发了将损失与地面速度和表面条件相关联的比例法则。我们的研究结果表明,行星的最终挥发预算严重依赖于其前身行星胚胎所经历的撞击的确切时间和顺序,这使得大气属性成为增殖的一个高度随机的结果。
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Atmospheric loss in giant impacts depends on pre-impact surface conditions
Earth likely acquired much of its inventory of volatile elements during the main stage of its formation. Some of Earth's proto-atmosphere must therefore have survived the giant impacts, collisions between planet-sized bodies, that dominate the latter phases of accretion. Here we use a suite of 1D hydrodynamic simulations and impedance match calculations to quantify the effect that pre-impact surface conditions (such as atmospheric pressure and presence of an ocean) have on the efficiency of atmospheric and ocean loss from proto-planets during giant impacts. We find that -- in the absence of an ocean -- lighter, hotter, and lower-pressure atmospheres are more easily lost. The presence of an ocean can significantly increase the efficiency of atmospheric loss compared to the no-ocean case, with a rapid transition between low and high loss regimes as the mass ratio of atmosphere to ocean decreases. However, contrary to previous thinking, the presence of an ocean can also reduce atmospheric loss if the ocean is not sufficiently massive, typically less than a few times the atmospheric mass. Volatile loss due to giant impacts is thus highly sensitive to the surface conditions on the colliding bodies. To allow our results to be combined with 3D impact simulations, we have developed scaling laws that relate loss to the ground velocity and surface conditions. Our results demonstrate that the final volatile budgets of planets are critically dependent on the exact timing and sequence of impacts experienced by their precursor planetary embryos, making atmospheric properties a highly stochastic outcome of accretion.
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