Heidelberg University: Bombardment of Planets in the Early Solar System

The Earth-like planets in the early Solar System first grew by accumulation of dust grains; in the final stage they were fed by impacts from increasingly larger rocky bodies. This is also true for the asteroid Vesta. Early in its formation, Vesta became hotter and hotter, producing a magma ocean near the surface as well as a liquid metallic core. Over time, other objects bombarded its crust, ejecting its material that was transported to the Earth as meteorites. Chemical analyses of these meteorites have shown that further cosmic impacts changed the composition of Vesta’s mantle and crust significantly, even after core formation. The mass that accumulated right after Vesta’s core formed was considerably larger than later additions, as Freie Universität Berlin geoscientist Prof. Dr Harry Becker explains.

Through computer modelling of Vesta’s thermal evolution, which were conducted by Dr Wladimir Neumann at the Institute of Earth Sciences of Heidelberg University, the time frame of the early impacts can now be narrowed down more precisely. “For the material of the impactor to mix with the mantle fairly homogeneously in the first place, the mantle has to be hot enough and undergo convective motions,” explains Dr Neumann. “Our models have shown that this was true only for impacts within the short time span between 4.56 and approximately 4.50 billion years ago.” Until now, scientists assumed that the main phase of this bombardment occurred many hundreds of millions of years later, at a time when several of the large impact craters were forming on the Moon.

Apparently, the impactors do not originate from today’s asteroid belt, as previously thought, but from the inner Solar System where the terrestrial planets formed. “For our Earth, this again emphasises the significance of an early hot phase with a magma ocean that was continually renewed through major impacts. During this time, the atmosphere was blazing hot for millions of years. Only much later could the water oceans form when the hot steam cooled and fell as rain,” explains Prof. Dr Kai Wünnemann from the Natural History Museum Berlin and Freie Universität Berlin.

The research at Heidelberg University was substantially funded by the Klaus Tschira Foundation. The contributions from Berlin were supported by the Transregional Collaborative Research Centre “Late Accretion onto Terrestrial Planets” whose participating institutions also include, among others, the University of Münster and that is funded by the German Research Foundation. Other participants in the international study include researchers from Macau University of Science and Technology (Macau), the University of Nice Sophia-Antipolis (France), the University of California at Davis and the University of California San Diego (both USA), the University of Bayreuth, the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson (USA), and the Institute of Planetary Research of the German Aerospace Center. The results of the study were published in the journal “Nature Astronomy”.