The Planetary Science Journal (Jan 2024)

Insights on the Formation Conditions of Uranus and Neptune from Their Deep Elemental Compositions

  • Olivier Mousis,
  • Antoine Schneeberger,
  • Thibault Cavalié,
  • Kathleen E. Mandt,
  • Artyom Aguichine,
  • Jonathan I. Lunine,
  • Tom Benest Couzinou,
  • Vincent Hue,
  • Raphaël Moreno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ad58d8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 8
p. 173

Abstract

Read online

This study, placed in the context of the preparation for the Uranus Orbiter Probe mission, aims to predict the bulk volatile compositions of Uranus and Neptune. Using a protoplanetary disk model, it examines the evolution of trace species through vapor and solid transport as dust and pebbles. Due to the high carbon abundance found in their envelopes, the two planets are postulated to have formed at the carbon monoxide ice line within the protosolar nebula. The time evolution of the abundances of the major volatile species at the location of the CO ice line is then calculated to derive the abundance ratios of the corresponding key elements, including the heavy noble gases, in the feeding zones of Uranus and Neptune. Supersolar metallicity in their envelopes likely results from accreting solids in these zones. Two types of solids are considered: pure condensates (Case 1) and a mixture of pure condensates and clathrates (Case 2). The model, calibrated to observed carbon enrichments, predicts deep compositions. In Case 1, argon is deeply depleted, while nitrogen, oxygen, krypton, phosphorus, sulfur, and xenon are significantly enriched relative to their protosolar abundances in the two planets. Case 2 predicts significant enrichments for all species, including argon, relative to their protosolar abundances. Consequently, Case 1 predicts near-zero Ar/Kr or Ar/Xe ratios, while Case 2 suggests that these ratios are 0.1 and 0.5–1 times their protosolar ratios, respectively. Both cases predict a bulk sulfur-to-nitrogen ratio consistent with atmospheric measurements.

Keywords