1,477 research outputs found
The formation of the solar system
The solar system started to form about 4.56 Gyr ago and despite the long
intervening time span, there still exist several clues about its formation. The
three major sources for this information are meteorites, the present solar
system structure and the planet-forming systems around young stars. In this
introduction we give an overview of the current understanding of the solar
system formation from all these different research fields. This includes the
question of the lifetime of the solar protoplanetary disc, the different stages
of planet formation, their duration, and their relative importance. We consider
whether meteorite evidence and observations of protoplanetary discs point in
the same direction. This will tell us whether our solar system had a typical
formation history or an exceptional one. There are also many indications that
the solar system formed as part of a star cluster. Here we examine the types of
cluster the Sun could have formed in, especially whether its stellar density
was at any stage high enough to influence the properties of today's solar
system. The likelihood of identifying siblings of the Sun is discussed.
Finally, the possible dynamical evolution of the solar system since its
formation and its future are considered.Comment: 36 pages, 7 figures, invited review in Physica Script
Transiting Disintegrating Planetary Debris around WD 1145+017
More than a decade after astronomers realized that disrupted planetary
material likely pollutes the surfaces of many white dwarf stars, the discovery
of transiting debris orbiting the white dwarf WD 1145+017 has opened the door
to new explorations of this process. We describe the observational evidence for
transiting planetary material and the current theoretical understanding (and in
some cases lack thereof) of the phenomenon.Comment: Invited review chapter. Accepted March 23, 2017 and published October
7, 2017 in the Handbook of Exoplanets. 15 pages, 10 figure
Extrasolar planetary dynamics with a generalized planar Laplace-Lagrange secular theory
The dynamical evolution of nearly half of the known extrasolar planets in
multiple-planet systems may be dominated by secular perturbations. The commonly
high eccentricities of the planetary orbits calls into question the utility of
the traditional Laplace-Lagrange (LL) secular theory in analyses of the motion.
We analytically generalize this theory to fourth-order in the eccentricities,
compare the result with the second-order theory and octupole-level theory, and
apply these theories to the likely secularly-dominated HD 12661, HD 168443, HD
38529 and Ups And multi-planet systems. The fourth-order scheme yields a
multiply-branched criterion for maintaining apsidal libration, and implies that
the apsidal rate of a small body is a function of its initial eccentricity,
dependencies which are absent from the traditional theory. Numerical results
indicate that the primary difference the second and fourth-order theories
reveal is an alteration in secular periodicities, and to a smaller extent
amplitudes of the planetary eccentricity variation. Comparison with numerical
integrations indicates that the improvement afforded by the fourth-order theory
over the second-order theory sometimes dwarfs the improvement needed to
reproduce the actual dynamical evolution. We conclude that LL secular theory,
to any order, generally represents a poor barometer for predicting secular
dynamics in extrasolar planetary systems, but does embody a useful tool for
extracting an accurate long-term dynamical description of systems with small
bodies and/or near-circular orbits.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap
Necroplanetology : simulating the tidal disruption of differentiated planetary material orbiting WD 1145+017
The WD 1145+017 system shows irregular transit features that are consistent with the tidal disruption of differentiated asteroids with bulk densities and bulk masses . We use the open-source N-body code REBOUND to simulate this disruption with different internal structures: varying the core volume fraction, mantle/core density ratio, and the presence/absence of a thin low-density crust. We allow the rubble pile to partially disrupt and capture lightcurves at a specific point during the disruption at cadences comparable to those from ground-based photometry. As a proof-of-concept we show that varying these structural parameters have observationally distinguishable effects on the transit lightcurve as the asteroid is disrupted and compare the simulation-generated lightcurves to data from Gary et al. With the caveat that our simulations do not model the sublimation in detail or account for its effects on orbital evolution, we find that a low core fraction and low mantle/core density ratio asteroid is most consistent with the stable transit feature present for multiple weeks circa 2016 April (referred to as G6121 in Gary et al. and A1 in Hallakoun et al.). Connecting tidal disruption simulations to photometry suggests characteristics for the interior structure and composition of an exoplanetary body, information that is only possible because we are observing the death of the planetary system in action. All-sky survey missions such as TESS and LSST will be able to detect other systems like WD 1145+017, creating a sample of subjects for a new subfield of planetary science: necroplanetology
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Eight billion asteroids in the Oort cloud
The Oort cloud is usually thought of as a collection of icy comets inhabiting the outer reaches of the Solar system, but this picture is incomplete. We use simulations of the formation of the Oort cloud to show that âŒ4âperâcent of the small bodies in the Oort cloud should have formed within 2.5 au of the Sun, and hence be ice-free rock-iron bodies. If we assume that these Oort cloud asteroids have the same size distribution as their cometary counterparts, the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope should find roughly a dozen Oort cloud asteroids during 10 years of operations. Measurement of the asteroid fraction within the Oort cloud can serve as an excellent test of the Solar system's formation and dynamical history. Oort cloud asteroids could be of particular concern as impact hazards as their high mass density, high impact velocity, and low visibility make them both hard to detect and hard to divert or destroy. However, they should be a rare class of object, and we estimate globally catastrophic collisions should only occur about once per billion years.AS andMWare supported by the European
Union through ERC grant number 279973. DV is supported
by the European Union through ERC grant number 320964.This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/446/2/2059
Constraining planet formation around 6Mâ-8Mâ stars
Identifying planets around O-type and B-type stars is inherently difficult; the most massive known planet host has a mass of only about 3Mâ. However, planetary systems which survive the transformation of their host stars into white dwarfs can be detected via photospheric trace metals, circumstellar dusty and gaseous discs, and transits of planetary debris crossing our line-of-sight. These signatures offer the potential to explore the efficiency of planet formation for host stars with masses up to the core-collapse boundary at â8Mâ, a mass regime rarely investigated in planet formation theory. Here, we establish limits on where both major and minor planets must reside around â6Mâ â 8Mâ stars in order to survive into the white dwarf phase. For this mass range, we find that intact terrestrial or giant planets need to leave the main sequence beyond approximate minimum star-planet separations of respectively about 3 and 6 au. In these systems, rubble pile minor planets of radii 10, 1.0, and 0.1 km would have been shorn apart by giant branch radiative YORP spin-up if they formed and remained within, respectively, tens, hundreds and thousands of au. These boundary values would help distinguish the nature of the progenitor of metal-pollution in white dwarf atmospheres. We find that planet formation around the highest mass white dwarf progenitors may be feasible, and hence encourage both dedicated planet formation investigations for these systems and spectroscopic analyses of the highest mass white dwarfs
Manejo correto da ordenha e qualidade do leite.
Muitas vezes o produtor se questiona quais as vantagens de adotar duas ou trĂȘs ordenhas diĂĄrias. A resposta para esta pergunta tem que considerar uma sĂ©rie de fatores, tais como o custo da mĂŁo de obra, custos adicionais conseqĂŒentes da realização de uma terceira ordenha (luz, material de limpeza, etc.), incremento na produção de leite obtido e o valor recebido pelo leite.bitstream/item/55815/1/CR27-02.pd
Degeneracy in the characterization of non-transiting planets from transit timing variations
The transit timing variation (TTV) method allows the detection of
non-transiting planets through their gravitational perturbations. Since TTVs
are strongly enhanced in systems close to mean-motion resonances (MMR), even a
low mass planet can produce an observable signal. This technique has thus been
proposed to detect terrestrial planets. In this letter, we analyse TTV signals
for systems in or close to MMR in order to illustrate the difficulties arising
in the determination of planetary parameters. TTVs are computed numerically
with an n-body integrator for a variety of systems close to MMR. The main
features of these TTVs are also derived analytically. Systems deeply inside MMR
do not produce particularly strong TTVs, while those close to MMR generate
quasiperiodic TTVs characterised by a dominant long period term and a low
amplitude remainder. If the remainder is too weak to be detected, then the
signal is strongly degenerate and this prevents the determination of the
planetary parameters. Even though an Earth mass planet can be detected by the
TTV method if it is close to a MMR, it may not be possible to assert that this
planet is actually an Earth mass planet. On the other hand, if the system is
right in the center of a MMR, the high amplitude oscillation of the TTV signal
vanishes and the detection of the perturber becomes as difficult as it is far
from MMR.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to MNRA
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