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Uranus and Neptune as methane planets: Producing icy giants from refractory planetesimals

  • Uri Malamud*
  • , Morris Podolak
  • , Joshua I. Podolak
  • , Peter H. Bodenheimer
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
  • D. E. Shaw Group
  • University of California at Santa Cruz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Uranus and Neptune are commonly considered ice giants, and it is often assumed that, in addition to a solar mix of hydrogen and helium, they contain roughly twice as much water as rock. This classical picture has led to successful models of their internal structure and has been understood to be compatible with the composition of the solar nebula during their formation (Reynolds and Summers, 1965; Podolak and Cameron, 1974; Podolak and Reynolds, 1984; Podolak et al., 1995). However, the dominance of water has been recently questioned (Teanby et al., 2020; Helled and Fortney, 2020; Podolak et al., 2022). Planetesimals in the outer solar system are composed mainly of refractory materials, leading to an inconsistency between the icy composition of Uranus and Neptune and the ice-poor planetesimals they accreted during formation (Podolak et al., 2022). Here we elaborate on this problem, and propose a new potential solution. We show that chemical reactions between planetesimals dominated by organic-rich refractory materials and the hydrogen in gaseous atmospheres of protoplanets can form large amounts of methane ‘ice’. Uranus and Neptune could thus be compatible with having accreted refractory-dominated planetesimals, while still remaining icy. Using random statistical computer models for a wide parameter space, we show that the resulting methane-rich internal composition could be a natural solution, giving a good match to the size, mass and moment of inertia of Uranus and Neptune, whereas rock-rich models appear to only work if a rocky interior is heavily mixed with hydrogen. Our model predicts a lower than solar hydrogen to helium ratio, which can be tested. We conclude that Uranus, Neptune and similar exoplanets could be methane-rich, and discuss why Jupiter and Saturn cannot.

Original languageEnglish
Article number116217
JournalIcarus
Volume421
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2024

Funding

FundersFunder number
NASA
Niedersächsisches Vorab
Pazy Fund of the Israel Atomic Energy Commission
MOST-space
Israel and Lower SaxonyZN 3630
National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationEW-18-2-0060

    Keywords

    • Neptune
    • Planet formation
    • Planetary interior
    • Uranus

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