Collisional fragmentation is shown to not be a barrier to rocky planet formation at small distances from the host star. Simple analytic arguments demonstrate that rocky planet formation via collisions of homogeneous gravity-dominated bodies is possible down to distances of order the Roche radius ( r Roche ). Extensive N -body simulations with initial bodies ≳1700 km that include plausible models for fragmentation and merging of gravity-dominated bodies confirm this conclusion and demonstrate that rocky planet formation is possible down to ∼1.1 r Roche . At smaller distances, tidal effects cause collisions to be too fragmenting to allow mass buildup to a final, dynamically stable planetary system. We argue that even differentiated bodies can accumulate to form planets at distances that are not much larger than r Roche .
CITATION STYLE
Wallace, J., Tremaine, S., & Chambers, J. (2017). Collisional Fragmentation Is Not a Barrier to Close-in Planet Formation. The Astronomical Journal, 154(5), 175. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/aa8c08
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