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Abstract EANA2025-162



Dynamical origin of a carbonaceous rich theia

Duarte Branco Author (1) (2), Sean N. Raymond Co-Author (3), Pedro Machado Co-Author (1) (2)
(1) Institute of Astrophysics and Space Sciences, Portugal, (2) Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal, (3) Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Bordeaux, Univ. Bordeaux, France


Cosmochemical studies have proposed that Earth accreted roughly 5-10% of its mass from carbonaceous (CC) material, with a large fraction delivered late via its final impactor, Theia (the Moon-forming impactor). Here, we evaluate this idea using dynamical simulations of terrestrial planet formation, starting from a standard setup with a population of planetary embryos and planetesimals laid out in a ring centered between Venus and Earth's orbits, and also including a population of CC planetesimals and planetary embryos scattered inward by Jupiter. We find that this scenario can match a large number of constraints, including i) the terrestrial planets' masses and orbits; ii) the CC mass fraction of Earth; iii) the much lower CC mass fraction of Mars, as long as Mars only accreted CC planetesimals (but no CC embryos); iv) the timing of the last giant (Moon-forming) impact; and v) a late accretion phase dominated by non-carbonaceous (NC) bodies. For this scenario to work, the total mass in scattered CC objects must have been ~ 0.2 - 0.3 M🜨, with an embryo-to-planetesimal mass ratio of at least 8, and CC embryos in the ~ 0.01 - 0.05 M🜨 mass range. In that case, our simulations show there are roughly 50-50 odds of Earth's last giant impactor (Theia) having been a carbonaceous object - either a pure CC embryo or an NC embryo that previously accreted a CC embryo, resulting in a bulk delivery of prebiotic material and water to Earth. Our simulations thus provide dynamical validation of cosmochemical studies.