Constraining the Origin of Mars via Simulations of Multi-Stage Core Formation [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.11236


It remains an elusive goal to simultaneously model the astrophysics of Solar System accretion while reproducing the mantle chemistry of more than one inner terrestrial planet. Here, we used a multistage core-mantle differentiation model based on Rubie et al. (2011,2015) to track the formation and composition of Earth and Mars in various Grand Tack formation simulations. Prior studies showed that in order to recreate Earth’s mantle composition, it must grow first from reduced (Fe-metal rich and O-poor) building blocks and then from increasingly oxidized (FeO rich) material. This accretion chemistry occurs when an oxidation gradient exists across the disk so that the innermost solids are reduced and increasingly oxidized material is found at greater heliocentric distances. For a suite of Grand Tack simulations, we investigated whether Earth and Mars can be simultaneously produced by the same oxidation gradient. Our model did not find an oxidation gradient that simultaneously reproduces the mantle composition of Earth and Mars. Due to its small mass and rapid formation, the formation history of Mars-like planets is very stochastic which decreases the likelihood of compatibility with an Earth-producing oxidation gradient in any given realization. To reconcile the accretion history and ideal chemistry of the Mars-like planet with the oxidation gradient of an Earth-producing disk, we determined where in the Earth-producing disk Mars must have formed. We find that the FeO-rich composition of the Martian mantle requires that Mars’ building blocks must originate exterior to 1.0 astronomical units (AU).

Read this paper on arXiv…

G. Nathan, D. Rubie and S. Jacobson
Tue, 25 Apr 23
11/72

Comments: 20 pages, 7 figures, Accepted for publication at ICARUS 04/2023