The late stages of terrestrial planet formation are dominated by giant
impacts that collectively influence the growth, composition and habitability of
any planets that form. Hitherto, numerical models designed to explore these
late stage collisions have been limited by assuming that all collisions lead to
perfect accretion, and many of these studies lack the large number of
realizations needed to account for the chaotic nature of N-body systems. We
improve on these limitations by performing 280 simulations of planet formation
around a Sun-like star, half of which used an N-body algorithm that has
recently been modified to include fragmentation and hit-and-run (bouncing)
collisions. We find that when fragmentation is included, the final planets
formed are comparable in terms of mass and number, however their collision
histories differ significantly and the accretion time approximately doubles. We
explored impacts onto Earth-like planets which we parameterized in terms of
their specific impact energies. Only 15 of our 164 Earth-analogs experienced an
impact that was energetic enough to strip an entire atmosphere. To strip about
half of an atmosphere requires energies comparable to recent models of the
Moon-forming giant impact. Almost all Earth-analogs received at least one
impact that met this criteria during the 2 Gyr simulations and the median was
three giant impacts. The median time of the final giant impact was 43 Myr after
the start of the simulations, leading us to conclude that the time-frame of the
Moon-forming impact is typical amongst planetary systems around Sun-like stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap