167 research outputs found
Constraints on the Orbital Evolution of Triton
We present simulations of Triton's post-capture orbit that confirm the
importance of Kozai-type oscillations in its orbital elements. In the context
of the tidal orbital evolution model, these variations require average
pericenter distances much higher than previously published, and the timescale
for the tidal orbital evolution of Triton becomes longer than the age of the
Solar System. Recently-discovered irregular satellites present a new constraint
on Triton's orbital history. Our numerical integrations of test particles
indicate a timescale for Triton's orbital evolution to be less than yrs
for a reasonable number of distant satellites to survive Triton's passage. This
timescale is inconsistent with the exclusively tidal evolution (time scale of
yrs), but consistent with the interestion with the debris from
satellite-satellite collisions. Any major regular satellites will quickly
collide among themselves after being perturbed by Triton, and the resulting
debris disk would eventually be swept up by Triton; given that the total mass
of the Uranian satellite system is 40% of that of Triton, large scale evolution
is possible. This scenario could have followed either collisional or the
recently-discussed three-body-interaction-based capture.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for ApJ
Terrestrial production vs. extraterrestrial delivery of prebiotic organics to the early Earth
A comprehensive treatment of comet/asteroid interaction with the atmosphere, ensuring surface impact, and resulting organic pyrolysis is required to determine whether more than a negligible fraction of the organics in incident comets and asteroids actually survived collision with Earth. Results of such an investigation, using a smoothed particle hydrodynamic simulation of cometary and asteroidal impacts into both oceans and rock, demonstrate that organics will not survive impacts at velocities approx. greater than 10 km s(exp -1), and that even comets and asteroids as small as 100m in radius cannot be aerobraked to below this velocity in 1 bar atmospheres. However, for plausible dense (10 bar CO2) early atmospheres, there will be sufficient aerobraking during atmospheric passage for some organics to survive the ensuing impact. Combining these results with analytical fits to the lunar impact record shows that 4.5 Gyr ago Earth was accreting at least approx. 10(exp 6) kg yr(exp 1) of intact cometary organics, a flux which thereafter declined with a approx. 100 Myr half-life. The extent to which this influx was augmented by asteroid impacts, as well as the effect of more careful modelling of a variety of conservative approximations, is currently being quantified. These results may be placed in context by comparison with in situ organic production from a variety of terrestrial energy sources, as well as organic delivery by interplanetary dust. Which source dominated the early terrestrial prebiotic inventory is found to depend on the nature of the early terrestrial atmosphere. However, there is an intriguing symmetry: it is exactly those dense CO2 atmospheres where in situ atmospheric production of organic molecules should be the most difficult, in which intact cometary organics would be delivered in large amounts
Organic synthesis in the outer Solar System: Recent laboratory simulations for Titan, the Jovian planets, Triton and comets
We tabulate the most abundant gases and their radiation yields, for two experimental pressures: 0.24 mb, more relevant to upper atmosphere excitation, and 17 mb, more relevant to tropospheric, cosmic ray excitation. The yields computed in the 0.24 mb experiment combined with measured electronic fluxes and a simple, eddy diffusion model of Titan's atmosphere predict abundances of detected molecules in agreement with those found by Voyager and for heavier products, in somewhat better agreement with observation than photochemical absolute reaction rate kinetics models. All Voyager organics are accounted for and no detectable products are found that Voyager did not detect. A striking increase of products with multiple bonds is found with decreasing pressure. Hydrocarbon abundances decline slowly with increasing carbon number. Additionally, we list preliminary estimates for the yield of the heteropolymer, which seems to be produced in a quantity comparable (in moles of C+N consumed) to the total amount of gaseous product. The production rate required to sustain Titan's haze against sedimentation also indicates yields of this order. As can be seen from the table, over 10(exp 9) years substantial amounts of these products can accumulate on the surface -- ranging from cm thickness for the (C+N equals 4) species to a meter or more for HCN and C2H2; we also expect a meter or more of tholins. Similar analyses have been or are being done for the Jovian planets and Triton. Charged particle irradiation of hydrocarbon clathrates or mixed hydrocarbon/water ices produces a range of organic products, reddening and darkening of the ices and characteristic infrared spectra. From such spectra, the predicted emission by fine particles in cometary comae well-matches the observed 3.4 micron emission spectra of Comet Halley and other recent comets. Heliocentric evolution of organic emission features in comets is predicted. Organic products of such ice irradiation may account for colors and albedos on some of the satellites in the outer solar system, especially Triton and Pluto, where solid methane is known to exist
The Cosmic Coincidence as a Temporal Selection Effect Produced by the Age Distribution of Terrestrial Planets in the Universe
The energy densities of matter and the vacuum are currently observed to be of
the same order of magnitude: . The cosmological window of time during which this occurs is
relatively narrow. Thus, we are presented with the cosmological coincidence
problem: Why, just now, do these energy densities happen to be of the same
order? Here we show that this apparent coincidence can be explained as a
temporal selection effect produced by the age distribution of terrestrial
planets in the Universe. We find a large () probability that
observations made from terrestrial planets will result in finding at
least as close to as we observe today. Hence, we, and any
observers in the Universe who have evolved on terrestrial planets, should not
be surprised to find . This result is
relatively robust if the time it takes an observer to evolve on a terrestrial
planet is less than Gyr.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Origin of Life
The evolution of life has been a big enigma despite rapid advancements in the
fields of biochemistry, astrobiology, and astrophysics in recent years. The
answer to this puzzle has been as mind-boggling as the riddle relating to
evolution of Universe itself. Despite the fact that panspermia has gained
considerable support as a viable explanation for origin of life on the Earth
and elsewhere in the Universe, the issue remains far from a tangible solution.
This paper examines the various prevailing hypotheses regarding origin of life
like abiogenesis, RNA World, Iron-sulphur World, and panspermia; and concludes
that delivery of life-bearing organic molecules by the comets in the early
epoch of the Earth alone possibly was not responsible for kick-starting the
process of evolution of life on our planet.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures,invited review article, minor additio
Proposal for measurment of harmonic oscillator Berry phase in ion traps
We propose a scheme for measuring the Berry phase in the vibrational degree
of freedom of a trapped ion. Starting from the ion in a vibrational coherent
state we show how to reverse the sign of the coherent state amplitude by using
a purely geometric phase. This can then be detected through the internal
degrees of freedom of the ion. Our method can be applied to preparation of
Schr\"odinger cat states.Comment: Replaced with revised versio
Incidence and survival of remnant disks around main-sequence stars
We present photometric ISO 60 and 170um measurements, complemented by some
IRAS data at 60um, of a sample of 84 nearby main-sequence stars of spectral
class A, F, G and K in order to determine the incidence of dust disks around
such main-sequence stars. Of the stars younger than 400 Myr one in two has a
disk; for the older stars this is true for only one in ten. We conclude that
most stars arrive on the main sequence surrounded by a disk; this disk then
decays in about 400 Myr. Because (i) the dust particles disappear and must be
replenished on a much shorter time scale and (ii) the collision of
planetesimals is a good source of new dust, we suggest that the rapid decay of
the disks is caused by the destruction and escape of planetesimals. We suggest
that the dissipation of the disk is related to the heavy bombardment phase in
our Solar System. Whether all stars arrive on the main sequence surrounded by a
disk cannot be established: some very young stars do not have a disk. And not
all stars destroy their disk in a similar way: some stars as old as the Sun
still have significant disks.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, Astron & Astrophys. in pres
Chiral Polymerization in Open Systems From Chiral-Selective Reaction Rates
We investigate the possibility that prebiotic homochirality can be achieved
exclusively through chiral-selective reaction rate parameters without any other
explicit mechanism for chiral bias. Specifically, we examine an open network of
polymerization reactions, where the reaction rates can have chiral-selective
values. The reactions are neither autocatalytic nor do they contain explicit
enantiomeric cross-inhibition terms. We are thus investigating how rare a set
of chiral-selective reaction rates needs to be in order to generate a
reasonable amount of chiral bias. We quantify our results adopting a
statistical approach: varying both the mean value and the rms dispersion of the
relevant reaction rates, we show that moderate to high levels of chiral excess
can be achieved with fairly small chiral bias, below 10%. Considering the
various unknowns related to prebiotic chemical networks in early Earth and the
dependence of reaction rates to environmental properties such as temperature
and pressure variations, we argue that homochirality could have been achieved
from moderate amounts of chiral selectivity in the reaction rates.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Origins of Life and
Evolution of Biosphere
Delivery of Complex Organic Compounds from Evolved Stars to the Solar System
Stars in the late stages of evolution are able to synthesize complex organic compounds with aromatic and aliphatic structures over very short time scales. These compounds are ejected into the interstellar medium and distributed throughout the Galaxy. The structures of these compounds are similar to the insoluble organic matter found in meteorites. In this paper, we discuss to what extent stellar organics has enriched the primordial Solar System and possibly the early Earth
Geometric Approach to Pontryagin's Maximum Principle
Since the second half of the 20th century, Pontryagin's Maximum Principle has
been widely discussed and used as a method to solve optimal control problems in
medicine, robotics, finance, engineering, astronomy. Here, we focus on the
proof and on the understanding of this Principle, using as much geometric ideas
and geometric tools as possible. This approach provides a better and clearer
understanding of the Principle and, in particular, of the role of the abnormal
extremals. These extremals are interesting because they do not depend on the
cost function, but only on the control system. Moreover, they were discarded as
solutions until the nineties, when examples of strict abnormal optimal curves
were found. In order to give a detailed exposition of the proof, the paper is
mostly self\textendash{}contained, which forces us to consider different areas
in mathematics such as algebra, analysis, geometry.Comment: Final version. Minors changes have been made. 56 page
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