Title of article
A model of metal–silicate separation on growing planets
Author/Authors
Daphné A Monteux، نويسنده , , J. and Ricard، نويسنده , , Y. and Coltice، نويسنده , , N. and Dubuffet، نويسنده , , F. and Ulvrova، نويسنده , , M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
10
From page
353
To page
362
Abstract
The thermal evolution of planets during their accretionary growth is strongly influenced by impact heating. The temperature increase following a collision takes place mostly below the impact location in a volume a few times larger than that of the impactor. Impact heating depends essentially on the radius of the impacted planet. When this radius exceeds ~ 1000 km, the metal phase melts and forms a shallow and dense pool that penetrates the deep mantle as a diapir. To study the evolution of a metal diapir we propose a model of thermo-chemical readjustment that we compare to numerical simulations in axisymmetric spherical geometry and with variable viscosity. We show that the metallic phase sinks with a velocity of order of a Stokes velocity. The thermal energy released by the segregation of metal is smaller but comparable to the thermal energy buried during the impact. However as the latter is distributed in a large undifferentiated volume and the former potentially liberated into a much smaller volume (the diapir and its close surroundings) a significant heating of the metal can occur raising its temperature excess by at most a factor of 2 or 3. When the viscosity of the hot differentiated material decreases, the proportion of thermal energy transferred to the undifferentiated material increases and a protocore is formed at a temperature close to that of the impact zone.
Keywords
Early Earth , Numerical Modeling , Differentiation , meteoritical impacts , core formation
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number
2327803
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