Hydrodynamical simulations of giant impacts find lower post-impact CMB pressures due to thermal and rotational effects, common full mantle melting, and conditions favoring metal-silicate equilibration near the CMB.
Science , year = 2012, month = nov, volume = 338, pages =
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
Simulations of giant impacts between 0.2-4 Earth-mass planets yield post-impact luminosities of 5e-5 to 0.1 L_sun cooling over 1-2000 days, predicting 0-14 detections in Gaia DR4 and a comparable number in LSST.
Multi-technique observations constrain the configuration of the ξ Tau system, detecting orbital oscillations on multiple timescales and suggesting component C is itself a binary.
A review of SPH modeling for global-scale impacts, emphasizing material properties across size regimes and links to Solar System observations.
citing papers explorer
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Thermal and rotational effects of giant impacts during terrestrial planet accretion
Hydrodynamical simulations of giant impacts find lower post-impact CMB pressures due to thermal and rotational effects, common full mantle melting, and conditions favoring metal-silicate equilibration near the CMB.
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Can giant impacts be directly detected in other star systems?
Simulations of giant impacts between 0.2-4 Earth-mass planets yield post-impact luminosities of 5e-5 to 0.1 L_sun cooling over 1-2000 days, predicting 0-14 detections in Gaia DR4 and a comparable number in LSST.
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Configuration of the $\xi$ Tau system constrained by multi-technique observations
Multi-technique observations constrain the configuration of the ξ Tau system, detecting orbital oscillations on multiple timescales and suggesting component C is itself a binary.
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Recent advances in modelling of global-scale collisions using smoothed particle hydrodynamics
A review of SPH modeling for global-scale impacts, emphasizing material properties across size regimes and links to Solar System observations.