The water content and habitability of terrestrial planets are determined
during their final assembly, from perhaps a hundred 1000-km "planetary embryos"
and a swarm of billions of 1-10 km "planetesimals." During this process, we
assume that water-rich material is accreted by terrestrial planets via impacts
of water-rich bodies that originate in the outer asteroid region. We present
analysis of water delivery and planetary habitability in five high-resolution
simulations containing about ten times more particles than in previous
simulations (Raymond et al 2006a, Icarus, 183, 265-282). These simulations
formed 15 terrestrial planets from 0.4 to 2.6 Earth masses, including five
planets in the habitable zone. Every planet from each simulation accreted at
least the Earth's current water budget; most accreted several times that amount
(assuming no impact depletion). Each planet accreted at least five water-rich
embryos and planetesimals from past 2.5 AU; most accreted 10-20 water-rich
bodies.
We present a new model for water delivery to terrestrial planets in
dynamically calm systems, with low-eccentricity or low-mass giant planets --
such systems may be very common in the Galaxy. We suggest that water is
accreted in comparable amounts from a few planetary embryos in a "hit or miss"
way and from millions of planetesimals in a statistically robust process.
Variations in water content are likely to be caused by fluctuations in the
number of water-rich embryos accreted, as well as from systematic effects such
as planetary mass and location, and giant planet properties.Comment: Astrobiology, in pres