Published January 1, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Properties of outer solar system pebbles during planetesimal formation from meteor observations

  • 1. NASA, Ames Res Ctr, Mail Stop 245-3, Moffett Field, CA 94035 USA
  • 2. Gural Software & Anal LLC, 12241 Eliza Court, Lovettsville, VA 20180 USA
  • 3. CAMS BeNeLux, Ollenkamp 4, D-48599 Gronau, Germany
  • 4. NSFs Natl Opt Infrared Astron Res Lab, Cerro Tololo Interamer Observ, CAMS Chile, Casilla 603, La Serena, Chile
  • 5. Univ Cent Arkansas, Dept Phys & Astron, 201 Donaghey Ave, Conway, AR 72035 USA
  • 6. Lowell Observ, LOCAMS, 1400 West Mars Hill Rd, Flagstaff, AZ 86001 USA
  • 7. Univ Canterbury, Dept Phys & Astron, CAMS New Zealand, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
  • 8. Mendocino Coll, 1000 Hensley Creek Rd, Ukiah, CA 95482 USA
  • 9. Yozgat Bozok Univ, Dept Phys, CAMS Turkey, TR-66100 Yozgat, Turkiye
  • 10. CAMS Texas, 4635 Shadow Grass Dr, Katy, TX 77493 USA
  • 11. CAMS South Africa, Suite 617,Private Bag X043, ZA-1500 Benoni, South Africa
  • 12. CAMS EXOSS, Observ Nacl, Rua Gal Jose Cristino 77, BR-20921400 Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
  • 13. Curtin Univ, Int Ctr Radio Astron Res, CAMS Australia, Perth, WA 6102, Australia

Description

Observations of proto-planetary disks, as well as theoretical modeling, suggest that in the late stages of accretion leading up to the formation of planetesimals, particles grew to pebbles the size of 1-mm to tens of cm, depending on the location and ambient conditions in the disk. That is the same size range that dominates the present-day comet and primitive asteroid mass loss. Meteoroids that size cause visible meteors on Earth. Here, we hypothesize that the size distribution and the physical and chemical properties of young meteoroid streams still contain information about the conditions in the solar nebula during these late stages of accretion towards planetesimal formation. If so, they constrain where long-period (Oort Cloud) comets, Jupiter-family (Scattered Disk Kuiper Belt) comets, and primitive asteroids (Asteroid Belt) formed. From video and visual observations of 47 young meteor showers, we find that freshly ejected meteoroids from long-period comets tend to have low bulk density and are distributed with equal surface area per log-mass interval (magnitude distribution index chi- 1.85), suggesting gentle accretion conditions. Jupiter-family comets, on the other hand, mostly produce meteoroids twice as dense and distributed with a steeper chi- 2.15 or even chi- 2.5, which implies that those pebbles grew from particles fragmenting in a collisional cascade or by catastrophic collisions, respectively. Some primitive asteroids show chi > 2.5, with most mass in small particles, indicating an even more aggressive fragmentation by processes other than mutual collisions. Both comet populations contain an admixture of compact materials that are sometimes sodium-poor, but Jupiter-family comets show a higher percentage (-8% on average) than long- period comet showers (-4%) and a wider range of percentages among comets. While there are exceptions in both groups, the implication is that most long-period comets formed under gentle particle growth conditions, possibly near the 30 AU edge of the Trans Neptunian Disk, while most Jupiter family comets formed closer to the Sun where pebbles reached or passed the fragmentation barrier, and primitive asteroids formed in the region where the cores of the giant planets formed. This is possible if the Scattered Disk represents all objects scattered by Neptune during its migration, while the present-day outer Oort cloud formed only during and after the time of the planet instability, well after the Sun had moved away from sibling stars.

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