A Collisional Origin to Earth’s Non-chondritic Composition?

A collisional origin to earth’s non-chondritic composition?
Authors:
Bonsor et al
Abstract:
Several
lines of evidence indicate a non-chondritic composition for Bulk Earth.
If Earth formed from the accretion of chondritic material, its
non-chondritic composition, in particular the super-chondritic
142Nd/144Nd142Nd/144Nd and low Mg/Fe ratios, might be explained by the
collisional erosion of differentiated planetesimals during its
formation. In this work we use an N-body code, that includes a
state-of-the-art collision model, to follow the formation of
protoplanets, similar to proto-Earth, from differentiated planetesimals
(> 100 km) up to isolation mass (> 0.16 M⊕). Collisions
between differentiated bodies have the potential to change the
core-mantle ratio of the accreted protoplanets. We show that sufficient
mantle material can be stripped from the colliding bodies during runaway
and oligarchic growth, such that the final protoplanets could have
Mg/Fe and Si/Fe ratios similar to that of bulk Earth, but only if Earth
is an extreme case and the core is assumed to contain 10% silicon by
mass. This may indicate an important role for collisional
differentiation during the giant impact phase if Earth formed from
chondritic material.
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