544 research outputs found
Planetesimal collisions in binary systems
We study the collisional evolution of km-sized planetesimals in tight binary
star systems to investigate whether accretion towards protoplanets can proceed
despite the strong gravitational perturbations from the secondary star. The
orbits of planetesimals are numerically integrated in two dimensions under the
influence of the two stars and gas drag. The masses and orbits of the
planetesimals are allowed to evolve due to collisions with other planetesimals
and accretion of collisional debris. In addition, the mass in debris can evolve
due to planetesimal-planetesimal collisions and the creation of new
planetesimals. We show that it is possible in principle for km-sized
planetesimals to grow by two orders of magnitude in size if the efficiency of
planetesimal formation is relatively low. We discuss the limitations of our
two-dimensional approach.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Planets in binary systems: is the present configuration indicative of the formation process?
The present dynamical configuration of planets in binary star systems may not
reflect their formation process since the binary orbit may have changed in the
past after the planet formation process was completed. An observed binary
system may have been part of a former hierarchical triple that became unstable
after the planets completed their growth around the primary star.
Alternatively, in a dense stellar environment even a single stellar encounter
between the star pair and a singleton may singificantly alter the binary orbit.
In both cases the planets we observe at present would have formed when the
dynamical environment was different from the presently observed one.
We have numerically integrated the trajectories of the stars (binary plus
singleton) and of test planets to investigate the abovementioned mechanisms.
Our simulations show that the circumstellar environment during planetary
formation around the primary was gravitationally less perturbed when the binary
was part of a hierarchical triple because the binary was necessarely wider and,
possibly, less eccentric. This circumstance has consequences for the planetary
system in terms of orbital spacing, eccentricity, and mass of the individual
planets. Even in the case of a single stellar encounter the present appearance
of a planetary system in a binary may significantly differ from what it had
while planet formation was ongoing. However, while in the case of instability
of a triple the trend is always towards a tighter and more eccentric binary
system, when a single stellar encounter affects the system the orbit of the
binary can become wider and be circularized.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures Accepted for publication on A&
Dynamics of Planetesimals due to Gas Drag from an Eccentric Precessing Disk
We analyze the dynamics of individual kilometer-size planetesimals in
circumstellar orbits of a tight binary system. We include both the
gravitational perturbations of the secondary star and a non-linear gas drag
stemming from an eccentric gas disk with a finite precession rate. We consider
several precession rates and eccentricities for the gas, and compare the
results with a static disk in circular orbit.
The disk precession introduces three main differences with respect to the
classical static case: (i) The equilibrium secular solutions generated by the
gas drag are no longer fixed points in the averaged system, but limit cycles
with frequency equal to the precession rate of the gas. The amplitude of the
cycle is inversely dependent on the body size, reaching negligible values for
km size planetesimals. (ii) The maximum final eccentricity attainable
by small bodies is restricted to the interval between the gas eccentricity and
the forced eccentricity, and apsidal alignment is no longer guaranteed for
planetesimals strongly coupled with the gas. (iii) The characteristic
timescales of orbital decay and secular evolution decrease significantly with
increasing precession rates, with values up to two orders of magnitude smaller
than for static disks.
Finally, we apply this analysis to the -Cephei system and estimate
impact velocities for different size bodies and values of the gas eccentricity.
For high disk eccentricities, we find that the disk precession decreases the
velocity dispersion between different size planetesimals, thus contributing to
accretional collisions in the outer parts of the disk. The opposite occurs for
almost circular gas disks, where precession generates an increase in the
relative velocities.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. Accepted in MNRA
Secular dynamics of planetesimals in tight binary systems: Application to Gamma-Cephei
The secular dynamics of small planetesimals in tight binary systems play a
fundamental role in establishing the possibility of accretional collisions in
such extreme cases. The most important secular parameters are the forced
eccentricity and secular frequency, which depend on the initial conditions of
the particles, as well as on the mass and orbital parameters of the secondary
star. We construct a second-order theory (with respect to the masses) for the
planar secular motion of small planetasimals and deduce new expressions for the
forced eccentricity and secular frequency. We also reanalyze the radial
velocity data available for Gamma-Cephei and present a series of orbital
solutions leading to residuals compatible with the best fits. Finally, we
discuss how different orbital configurations for Gamma-Cephei may affect the
dynamics of small bodies in circunmstellar motion. For Gamma-Cephei, we find
that the classical first-order expressions for the secular frequency and forced
eccentricity lead to large inaccuracies around 50 % for semimajor axes larger
than one tenth the orbital separation between the stellar components. Low
eccentricities and/or masses reduce the importance of the second-order terms.
The dynamics of small planetesimals only show a weak dependence with the
orbital fits of the stellar components, and the same result is found including
the effects of a nonlinear gas drag. Thus, the possibility of planetary
formation in this binary system largely appears insensitive to the orbital fits
adopted for the stellar components, and any future alterations in the system
parameters (due to new observations) should not change this picture. Finally,
we show that planetesimals migrating because of gas drag may be trapped in
mean-motion resonances with the binary, even though the migration is divergent.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Against all odds? Forming the planet of the HD196885 binary
HD196885Ab is the most "extreme" planet-in-a-binary discovered to date, whose
orbit places it at the limit for orbital stability. The presence of a planet in
such a highly perturbed region poses a clear challenge to planet-formation
scenarios. We investigate this issue by focusing on the planet-formation stage
that is arguably the most sensitive to binary perturbations: the mutual
accretion of kilometre-sized planetesimals. To this effect we numerically
estimate the impact velocities amongst a population of circumprimary
planetesimals. We find that most of the circumprimary disc is strongly hostile
to planetesimal accretion, especially the region around 2.6AU (the planet's
location) where binary perturbations induce planetesimal-shattering of
more than 1km/s. Possible solutions to the paradox of having a planet in such
accretion-hostile regions are 1) that initial planetesimals were very big, at
least 250km, 2) that the binary had an initial orbit at least twice the present
one, and was later compacted due to early stellar encounters, 3) that
planetesimals did not grow by mutual impacts but by sweeping of dust (the
"snowball" growth mode identified by Xie et al., 2010b), or 4) that HD196885Ab
was formed not by core-accretion but by the concurent disc instability
mechanism. All of these 4 scenarios remain however highly conjectural.Comment: accepted for publication by Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical
Astronomy (Special issue on EXOPLANETS
The Color Distribution in the Edgeworth-Kuiper Belt
We have started since 1997 the Meudon Multicolor Survey of Outer Solar System
Objects with the aim of collecting a large and homogeneous set of color data
for Trans-Neptunian and Centaurs objects [...] We have a combined sample of 52
B-R color measurements for 8 Centaurs, 22 Classicals, 13 Plutinos, 8 Scattered
objects and 1 object with unidentified dynamical class. This dataset is the
largest single and homogeneous published dataset to date [...]. A strong
(color) correlation with mean excitation velocity points toward a space
weathering/impact origin for the color diversity. However, thorough modeling of
the collisional/dynamical environment in the Edgeworth-Kuiper belt needs to be
done in order to confirm this scenario. We found also that the Classical TNOs
consist in the superposition of two distinct populations: the dynamically Cold
Classical TNOs (red colors, low i, small sizes) and the dynamically Hot
Classical TNOs (diverse colors, moderate and high i, larger sizes). [...] Our
specific observation strategy [...] permitted us to highlight a few objects
suspected to have true compositional and/or texture variation on their
surfaces. These are 1998 HK151, 1999 DF9, 1999 OY3, 2000 GP183, 2000 OK67, and
2001 KA77 and should be prime targets for further observations [...]. Our
survey has also highlighted 1998 SN165 whose colors and dynamical properties
puts it in a new dynamical class distinct from the Classicals, its previously
assigned dynamical class.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomical Journal (38 pages, inc. 11
figures
A high-resolution lithospheric magnetic field model over southern Africa based on a joint inversion of CHAMP, Swarm, WDMAM, and ground magnetic field data
We derive a lithospheric magnetic field model up to equivalent spherical
harmonic degree 1000 over southern Africa. We rely on a joint inversion of
satellite, near-surface, and ground magnetic field data. The input data set
consists of magnetic field vector measurements from the CHAMP satellite,
across-track magnetic field differences from the Swarm mission, the World
Digital Magnetic Anomaly Map, and magnetic field measurements from repeat
stations and three local INTERMAGNET observatories. For the inversion scheme,
we use the revised spherical cap harmonic analysis (R-SCHA), a regional
analysis technique able to deal with magnetic field measurements obtained at
different altitudes. The model is carefully assessed and displayed at
different altitudes and its spectral content is compared to high-resolution
global lithospheric field models. By comparing the shape of its spectrum to a
statistical power spectrum of Earth's lithospheric magnetic field, we infer
the mean magnetic thickness and the mean magnetization over southern Africa.</p
Neptune Trojans and Plutinos: colors, sizes, dynamics, and their possible collisions
Neptune Trojans and Plutinos are two subpopulations of trans-Neptunian
objects located in the 1:1 and the 3:2 mean motion resonances with Neptune,
respectively, and therefore protected from close encounters with the planet.
However, the orbits of these two kinds of objects may cross very often,
allowing a higher collisional rate between them than with other kinds of
trans-Neptunian objects, and a consequent size distribution modification of the
two subpopulations.
Observational colors and absolute magnitudes of Neptune Trojans and Plutinos
show that i) there are no intrinsically bright (large) Plutinos at small
inclinations, ii) there is an apparent excess of blue and intrinsically faint
(small) Plutinos, and iii) Neptune Trojans possess the same blue colors as
Plutinos within the same (estimated) size range do.
For the present subpopulations we analyzed the most favorable conditions for
close encounters/collisions and address any link there could be between those
encounters and the sizes and/or colors of Plutinos and Neptune Trojans. We also
performed a simultaneous numerical simulation of the outer Solar System over 1
Gyr for all these bodies in order to estimate their collisional rate.
We conclude that orbital overlap between Neptune Trojans and Plutinos is
favored for Plutinos with large libration amplitudes, high eccentricities, and
small inclinations. Additionally, with the assumption that the collisions can
be disruptive creating smaller objects not necessarily with similar colors, the
present high concentration of small Plutinos with small inclinations can thus
be a consequence of a collisional interaction with Neptune Trojans and such
hypothesis should be further analyzed.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in A&
High Contrast Imaging of the Close Environment of HD 142527 -
Context. It has long been suggested that circumstellar disks surrounding
young stars may be the signposts of planets, and still more since the recent
discoveries of embedded substellar companions. The planet-disk interaction may
create, according to models, large structures, gaps, rings or spirals, in the
disk. In that sense, the Herbig star HD 142527 is particularly compelling as,
its massive disk displays intriguing asymmetries that suggest the existence of
a dynamical peturber of unknown nature. Aims. Our goal was to obtain deep
thermal images of the close circumstellar environment of HD 142527 to re-image
the reported close-in structures (cavity, spiral arms) of the disk and to
search for stellar and substellar companions that could be connected to their
presence. Results. The circumstellar environment of HD 142527 is revealed at an
unprecedented spatial resolution down to the sub arcsecond level for the first
time at 3.8 microns. Our images reveal important radial and azimuthal
asymmetries which invalidate an elliptical shape for the disk as previously
proposed. It rather suggests a bright inhomogeneous spiral arm plus various
fainter spiral arms. We also confirm an inner cavity down to 30 AU and two
important dips at position angles of 0 and 135 deg. The detection performance
in angular differential imaging enables the exploration of the planetary mass
regime for projected physical separations as close as 40 AU. The use of our
detection map together with Monte Carlo simulations sets stringent constraints
on the presence of planetary mass, brown dwarf or stellar companions as a
function of the semi-major axis. They severely constrain the presence of
massive giant planets with semi-major axis beyond 50AU, i.e. probably within
the large disk's cavity that radially extends up to 145 AU or even further
outside.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted in A&
A note on divergent selection for total fleece weight in adult Angora rabbits: direct response to selection on total fleece weight at first and second harvest
[EN] In order to explore the genetic variability of wool production and other quantitative traits, an 8-cohort divergent selection experiment for total fleece weight (TFW) was carried out in French Angora rabbits. Studies were made on the wool production of a total of 669 female rabbits born between 1994 and 2001 and having produced wool from first to 12th harvests. The aim of the selection experiment was to obtain two divergent lines (low and high) on TFW. From preliminary analysis, the dataset was separated into three subsets according to the harvest number: one for each of the first two harvests and one for the third to the 12th harvests. In this paper, wool production data of the first and second harvests was analysed separately. Response to selection for total fleece weight at 3-12 harvest (TFW3-12) on this trait at first and second harvest was the aim of this paper. The second objective was to study the possibility of utilising values of the first or second harvest to estimate breeding values and as selection criteria for total fleece weight in the French Angora rabbit. Preliminary analysis of the data for non-genetic factors was done by the GLM procedure of SAS. Genetic parameters and breeding value estimates were carried out using a BLUP animal model using ASReml. A linear mixed model for a bivariate analysis of total fleece weight at first or second harvest and TFW3-12 was used. Heritability estimates of total fleece weight at first and second harvests were 0.36 and 0.38, respectively, and were similar to that observed at later harvests (0.35). The genetic correlation between TFW3-12 and fleece weight at first harvest was close to zero indicating that wool production at first harvest is a different trait from that of subsequent harvests. Genetic correlation estimates observed at second harvest were high (0.76) and response to selection at second harvest was similar to that observed for TFW3-12. These observations confirm that total fleece weight at first harvest is a different trait from TFW3-12. In French Angora rabbits, the high genetic correlation between TFW3-12 and total fleece weight at second harvest suggests the possibility of selection at this time for TFW3-12.The authors thank GĂ©rard Auvinet, Jean Claude Musseau and Patricia Bayle of the Institut National de la
Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Génétique Expérimentale en Productions Animales, Le Magneraud Poitou-Charentes Research
Centre for the collection of data and the supply and care of Angora rabbits.Rafat, S.; Thébault, R.; Bonnet, M.; Deretz, S.; Pena-Arnaud, B.; De Rochambeau, H.; Allain, D. (2009). A note on divergent selection for total fleece weight in adult Angora rabbits: direct response to selection on total fleece weight at first and second harvest. World Rabbit Science. 17(1):39-44. doi:10.4995/wrs.2009.669394417
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