Heavy-metal Jupiters by major mergers: metallicity vs. mass for giant planets
Abstract
Some Jupiter-mass exoplanets contain 100\, M of metals, well above the 10\, M typically needed in a solid core to trigger giant planet formation by runaway gas accretion. We demonstrate that such `heavy-metal Jupiters' can result from planetary mergers near 10 au. Multiple cores accreting gas at runaway rates gravitationally perturb one another onto crossing orbits such that the average merger rate equals the gas accretion rate. Concurrent mergers and gas accretion implies the core mass scales with the total planet mass as M core M1/5 - heavier planets harbour heavier cores, in agreement with the observed mass-metallicity relation. While the average gas giant merges about once to double its core, others may merge multiple times, as merger trees grow chaotically. We show that the dispersion of outcomes inherent in mergers can reproduce the large scatter in observed planet metallicities, assuming 3-30\, M pre-runaway cores. Mergers potentially correlate metallicity, eccentricity, and spin.
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