875 research outputs found
Dust-to-gas ratio resurgence in circumstellar disks due to the formation of giant planets: the case of HD 163296
The amount of dust present in circumstellar disks is expected to steadily
decrease with age due to the growth from micron-sized particles to
planetesimals and planets. Mature circumstellar disks, however, can be observed
to contain significant amounts of dust and possess high dust-to-gas ratios.
Using HD 163296 as our case study, we explore how the formation of giant
planets in disks can create the conditions for collisionally rejuvenating the
dust population, halting or reversing the expected trend. We combine N-body
simulations with statistical methods and impact scaling laws to estimate the
dynamical and collisional excitation of the planetesimals due to the formation
of HD 163296's giant planets. We show that this process creates a violent
collisional environment across the disk that can inject collisionally produced
second-generation dust into it, significantly contributing to the observed
dust-to-gas ratio. The spatial distribution of the dust production can explain
the observed local enrichments in HD 163296's inner regions. The results
obtained for HD 163296 can be extended to any disk with embedded forming giant
planets and may indicate a common evolutionary stage in the life of such
circumstellar disks. Furthermore, the dynamical excitation of the planetesimals
could result in the release of transient, non-equilibrium gas species like H2O,
CO2, NH3 and CO in the disk due to ice sublimation during impacts and, due to
the excited planetesimals being supersonic with respect to the gas, could
produce bow shocks in the latter that could heat it and cause a broadening of
its emission lines.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication on The
Astrophysical Journa
Olivine on Vesta as exogenous contaminants brought by impacts: Constraints from modeling Vesta's collisional history and from impact simulations
The survival of asteroid Vesta during the violent early history of the Solar
System is a pivotal constraint on theories of planetary formation. Particularly
important from this perspective is the amount of olivine excavated from the
vestan mantle by impacts, as this constrains both the interior structure of
Vesta and the number of major impacts the asteroid suffered during its life.
The NASA Dawn mission revealed that olivine is present on Vesta's surface in
limited quantities, concentrated in small patches at a handful of sites and
interpreted as the result of the excavation of endogenous olivine. Later works
raised the possibility that the olivine had an exogenous origin, based on the
geologic and spectral features of the deposits. In this work we quantitatively
explore the proposed scenario of a exogenous origin for the detected olivine to
investigate whether its presence on Vesta can be explained as a natural outcome
of the collisional history of the asteroid. We took advantage of the impact
contamination model previously developed to study the origin and amount of dark
and hydrated materials observed by Dawn on Vesta, which we updated by
performing dedicated hydrocode impact simulations. We show that the exogenous
delivery of olivine by impacts can offer a viable explanation for the currently
identified olivine-rich sites without violating the constraint posed by the
lack of global olivine signatures on Vesta. Our results indicate that no mantle
excavation is in principle required to explain the observations of the Dawn
mission and support the idea that the vestan crust could be thicker than
indicated by simple geochemical models based on the Howardite-Eucrite-Diogenite
family of meteorites.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication on the journal Icaru
The late accretion and erosion of Vesta's crust recorded by eucrites and diogenites as an astrochemical window into the formation of Jupiter and the early evolution of the Solar System
For decades the limited thickness of Vesta's basaltic crust, revealed by the
link between the asteroid and the howardite-eucrite-diogenite family of
meteorites, and its survival to collisional erosion offered an important
constraint for the study of the early evolution of the Solar System. Some
results of the Dawn mission, however, cast doubts on our understanding of
Vesta's interior composition and of the characteristics of its basaltic crust,
weakening this classical constraint. In this work we investigate the late
accretion and erosion experienced by Vesta's crust after its differentiation
and recorded in the composition of eucrites and diogenites and show that it
offers an astrochemical window into the earliest evolution of the Solar System.
In our proof-of-concept case study focusing on the late accretion and erosion
of Vesta's crust during the growth and migration of Jupiter, the water
enrichment of eucrites appears to be a sensitive function of Jupiter's
migration while the enrichment in highly-siderophile elements of diogenites
appears to be particularly sensitive to the size-frequency distribution of the
planetesimals. The picture depicted by the enrichments created by late
accretion in eucrites and diogenites is not qualitatively affected by the
uncertainty on the primordial mass of Vesta. Crustal erosion, instead, is more
significantly affected by said uncertainty and Vesta's crust survival appears
to be mainly useful to study violent collisional scenarios where highly
energetic impacts can strip significant amounts of vestan material while
limitedly contributing to Vesta's late accretion. Our results suggest that the
astrochemical record of the late accretion and erosion of Vesta's crust
provided by eucrites and diogenites can be used as a tool to investigate any
process or scenario associated to the evolution of primordial Vesta and of the
early Solar System.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication on Icaru
Habitable Planet Formation in Binary-Planetary Systems
Recent radial velocity observations have indicated that Jovian-type planets
can exist in moderately close binary star systems. Numerical simulations of the
dynamical stability of terrestrial-class planets in such environments have
shown that, in addition to their giant planets, these systems can also harbor
Earth-like objects. In this paper, we study the late stage of terrestrial
planet formation in such binary-planetary systems, and present the results of
the simulations of the formation of Earth-like bodies in their habitable zones.
We consider a circumprimary disk of Moon- to Mars-sized objects and numerically
integrate the orbits of these bodies at the presence of the Jovian-type planet
of the system and for different values of the mass, semimajor axis, and orbital
eccentricity of the secondary star. Results indicate that, Earth-like objects,
with substantial amounts of water, can form in the habitable zone of the
primary star. Simulations also indicate that, by transferring angular momentum
from the secondary star to protoplanetary objects, the giant planet of the
system plays a key role in the radial mixing of these bodies and the water
contents of the final terrestrial planets. We will discuss the results of our
simulation and show that the formation of habitable planets in binary-planetary
systems is more probable in binaries with moderate to large perihelia.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, submitted for publicatio
A new perspective on the irregular satellites of Saturn - II Dynamical and physical origin
The origin of the irregular satellites of the giant planets has been long
debated since their discovery. Their dynamical features argue against an
in-situ formation suggesting they are captured bodies, yet there is no global
consensus on the physical process at the basis of their capture. In this paper
we explore the collisional capture scenario, where the actual satellites
originated from impacts occurred within Saturn's influence sphere. By modeling
the inverse capture problem, we estimated the families of orbits of the
possible parent bodies and the specific impulse needed for their capture. The
orbits of these putative parent bodies are compared to those of the minor
bodies of the outer Solar System to outline their possible region of formation.
Finally, we tested the collisional capture hypothesis on Phoebe by taking
advantage of the data supplied by Cassini on its major crater, Jason. Our
results presented a realistic range of solutions matching the observational and
dynamical data.Comment: 26 Pages, 21 Figure
The quest for Magrathea planets I: formation of second generation exoplanets around double white dwarfs
The evolution of binaries that become double white dwarf (DWD) can cause the
ejection of high amounts of dust and gas. Such material can give rise to
circumbinary discs and become the cradle of new planets, yet no studies so far
have focused on the formation of circumbinary planets around DWDs. These
binaries will be the main sources of gravitational waves (GWs) detectable by
the ESA Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission, opening the
possibility to detect circumbinary planets around short-period DWDs everywhere
in the Milky Way. We investigate the formation of Magrathea planets by
simulating multiple planet formation tracks to explore how seeds growing first
by pebble accretion, and then by gas accretion, are affected by the disc
environments surrounding DWDs. We present both planetary formation tracks
taking place in steady-state discs, and formation tracks taking place in discs
evolving with time. The time-dependent tracks account for both the disc
accretion rate onto the central binary and the disc photoevaporation rate
caused by stellar irradiation. Our results show that planetary formation in
circumbinary discs around DWDs can be possible. In particular, the extreme
planetary formation environment implies three main significant results: (i) the
accretion rate and the metallicity of the disc should be high in order to form
sub-stellar objects with masses up to 31 M, this is achieved only if planet
formation starts soon after the onset of the disc and if first generation seeds
are present in the disc; (ii) seeds formed within 0.1 Myr, or within 1 Myr,
from the onset of the disc can only produce sub-Neptune and Neptunian planets,
unless the disc accommodates first generation seeds with mass 10 M;
(iii) most of the planets are finally located within 1 au from the disc centre,
while they are still undergoing the gas accretion phase.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A on 05/04/2023, abstract shortened, 28
pages, 11 figures, 14 table
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