Abstract: | Title: Uranus and Neptune as methane planets: Producing icy giants from refractory planetesimals
Abstract: The most distant planets in the solar system, Uranus and Neptune, are known as 'ice giants'. This term has been deemed appropriate because according to the prevailing belief of the last several decades, they contain roughly twice as much water as rock. In a new paper, we challenge this view and question the dominance of water. Modern observations of outer solar system bodies rather show them to be refractory-, and not ice-rich. Therefore, how can one form ice giants from ice-poor building blocks? As a first step to solve the composition tension problem, we develop a new technique to generate hundreds of thousands of random computer-generated models for the internal structure and composition of Uranus and Neptune. Mapping the space of possible compositions, we show that these planets cannot be rock giants instead of ice giants, thereby eliminating this as a potential solution. Alternatively, we propose an entirely new solution to form ice giants from ice-poor planetesimals. Contemporary observations show that the refractory materials inside outer solar system planetesimals contain a large fraction of refractory organics. We use several different codes in order to show that these organics are chemically transformed by reacting with the hydrogen in the growing atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune, during and after their accretion, thereby generating copious amounts of methane. This would make Uranus and Neptune methane-giants, and since methane is an ice, the term 'ice giants' turns out to be strictly appropriate. We show that there is an excellent agreement between random models of Uranus and Neptune with methane and chemistry-derived models. We offer a prediction to check our result in an upcoming mission to Uranus, in the next decade. |