4,947 research outputs found
ALMA and Herschel Observations of the Prototype Dusty and Polluted White Dwarf G29-38
ALMA Cycle 0 and Herschel PACS observations are reported for the prototype,
nearest, and brightest example of a dusty and polluted white dwarf, G29-38.
These long wavelength programs attempted to detect an outlying, parent
population of bodies at 1-100 AU, from which originates the disrupted
planetesimal debris that is observed within 0.01 AU and which exhibits L_IR/L =
0.039. No associated emission sources were detected in any of the data down to
L_IR/L ~ 1e-4, generally ruling out cold dust masses greater than 1e24 - 1e25 g
for reasonable grain sizes and properties in orbital regions corresponding to
evolved versions of both asteroid and Kuiper belt analogs. Overall, these null
detections are consistent with models of long-term collisional evolution in
planetesimal disks, and the source regions for the disrupted parent bodies at
stars like G29-38 may only be salient in exceptional circumstances, such as a
recent instability. A larger sample of polluted white dwarfs, targeted with the
full ALMA array, has the potential to unambiguously identify the parent
source(s) of their planetary debris.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures and 1 table. Accepted to MNRA
Coplanar Circumbinary Debris Disks
We present resolved Herschel images of circumbinary debris disks in the alpha
CrB (HD139006) and beta Tri (HD13161) systems. We find that both disks are
consistent with being aligned with the binary orbital planes. Though secular
perturbations from the binary can align the disk, in both cases the alignment
time at the distances at which the disk is resolved is greater than the stellar
age, so we conclude that the coplanarity was primordial. Neither disk can be
modelled as a narrow ring, requiring extended radial distributions. To satisfy
both the Herschel and mid-IR images of the alpha CrB disk, we construct a model
that extends from 1-300AU, whose radial profile is broadly consistent with a
picture where planetesimal collisions are excited by secular perturbations from
the binary. However, this model is also consistent with stirring by other
mechanisms, such as the formation of Pluto-sized objects. The beta Tri disk
model extends from 50-400AU. A model with depleted (rather than empty) inner
regions also reproduces the observations and is consistent with binary and
other stirring mechanisms. As part of the modelling process, we find that the
Herschel PACS beam varies by as much as 10% at 70um and a few % at 100um. The
70um variation can therefore hinder image interpretation, particularly for
poorly resolved objects. The number of systems in which circumbinary debris
disk orientations have been compared with the binary plane is now four. More
systems are needed, but a picture in which disks around very close binaries
(alpha CrB, beta Tri, and HD 98800, with periods of a few weeks to a year) are
aligned, and disks around wider binaries (99 Her, with a 50 yr period) are
misaligned, may be emerging. This picture is qualitatively consistent with the
expectation that the protoplanetary disks from which the debris emerged are
more likely to be aligned if their binaries have shorter periods.Comment: accepted to MNRA
Sub-arcsecond high sensitivity measurements of the DG~Tau jet with e-MERLIN
We present very high spatial resolution deep radio continuum observations at
5 GHz (6 cm) made with e-MERLIN of the young stars DG Tau A and B. Assuming it
is launched very close (~=1 au) from the star, our results suggest that the DG
Tau A outflow initially starts as a poorly focused wind and undergoes
significant collimation further along the jet (~=50 au). We derive jet
parameters for DG Tau A and find an initial jet opening angle of 86 degrees
within 2 au of the source, a mass-loss rate of 1.5x10^-8 solar masses/yr for
the ionised component of the jet, and the total ejection/accretion ratio to
range from 0.06-0.3. These results are in line with predictions from MHD
jet-launching theories.Comment: Accepted MNRAS Letter
Predicting the frequencies of diverse exo-planetary systems
Extrasolar planetary systems range from hot Jupiters out to icy comet belts
more distant than Pluto. We explain this diversity in a model where the mass of
solids in the primordial circumstellar disk dictates the outcome. The star
retains measures of the initial heavy-element (metal) abundance that can be
used to map solid masses onto outcomes, and the frequencies of all classes are
correctly predicted. The differing dependences on metallicity for forming
massive planets and low-mass cometary bodies are also explained. By
extrapolation, around two-thirds of stars have enough solids to form Earth-like
planets, and a high rate is supported by the first detections of low-mass
exo-planets.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; accepted by MNRA
Sub-millimeter images of a dusty Kuiper belt around eta Corvi
We present sub-millimeter and mid-infrared images of the circumstellar disk
around the nearby F2V star eta Corvi. The disk is resolved at 850um with a size
of ~100AU. At 450um the emission is found to be extended at all position
angles, with significant elongation along a position angle of 130+-10deg; at
the highest resolution (9.3") this emission is resolved into two peaks which
are to within the uncertainties offset symmetrically from the star at 100AU
projected separation. Modeling the appearance of emission from a narrow ring in
the sub-mm images shows the observed structure cannot be caused by an edge-on
or face-on axisymmetric ring; the observations are consistent with a ring of
radius 150+-20AU seen at 45+-25deg inclination. More face-on orientations are
possible if the dust distribution includes two clumps similar to Vega; we show
how such a clumpy structure could arise from the migration over 25Myr of a
Neptune mass planet from 80-105AU. The inner 100AU of the system appears
relatively empty of sub-mm emitting dust, indicating that this region may have
been cleared by the formation of planets, but the disk emission spectrum shows
that IRAS detected an additional hot component with a characteristic
temperature of 370+-60K (implying a distance of 1-2AU). At 11.9um we found the
emission to be unresolved with no background sources which could be
contaminating the fluxes measured by IRAS. The age of this star is estimated to
be ~1Gyr. It is very unusual for such an old main sequence star to exhibit
significant mid-IR emission. The proximity of this source makes it a perfect
candidate for further study from optical to mm wavelengths to determine the
distribution of its dust.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures. Scheduled for publication in ApJ 10 February
2005 issu
Discovery of the Fomalhaut C debris disc
Fomalhaut is one of the most interesting and well studied nearby stars,
hosting at least one planet, a spectacular debris ring, and two distant
low-mass stellar companions (TW PsA and LP 876-10, a.k.a. Fomalhaut B & C). We
observed both companions with Herschel, and while no disc was detected around
the secondary, TW PsA, we have discovered the second debris disc in the
Fomalhaut system, around LP 876-10. This detection is only the second case of
two debris discs seen in a multiple system, both of which are relatively wide
(3000 AU for HD 223352/40 and 158 kAU [0.77 pc] for Fomalhaut/LP
876-10). The disc is cool (24K) and relatively bright, with a fractional
luminosity , and represents the rare
observation of a debris disc around an M dwarf. Further work should attempt to
find if the presence of two discs in the Fomalhaut system is coincidental,
perhaps simply due to the relatively young system age of 440 Myr, or if the
stellar components have dynamically interacted and the system is even more
complex than it currently appears.Comment: Published in MNRAS Letters. Merry Xma
Transience of hot dust around sun-like stars
There is currently debate over whether the dust content of planetary systems
is stochastically regenerated or originates in planetesimal belts evolving in
steady state. In this paper a simple model for the steady state evolution of
debris disks due to collisions is developed and confronted with the properties
of the emerging population of 7 sun-like stars that have hot dust <10AU. The
model shows there is a maximum possible disk mass at a given age, since more
massive primordial disks process their mass faster. The corresponding maximum
dust luminosity is f_max=0.00016r^(7/3)/t_age. The majority (4/7) of the hot
disks exceed this limit by >1000 and so cannot be the products of massive
asteroid belts, rather the following systems must be undergoing transient
events characterized by an unusually high dust content near the star: eta
Corvi, HD69830, HD72905 and BD+20307. It is also shown that the hot dust cannot
originate in a recent collision in an asteroid belt, since there is also a
maximum rate at which collisions of sufficient magnitude to reproduce a given
dust luminosity can occur. Further it is shown that the planetesimal belt
feeding the dust in these systems must be located further from the star than
the dust, typically at >2AU. Other notable properties of the 4 hot dust systems
are: two also have a planetesimal belt at >10AU (eta Corvi and HD72905); one
has 3 Neptune mass planets at <1AU (HD69830); all exhibit strong silicate
features in the mid-IR. We consider the most likely origin for the dust in
these systems to be a dynamical instability which scattered planetesimals
inwards from a more distant planetesimal belt in an event akin to the Late
Heavy Bombardment in our own system, the dust being released from such
planetesimals in collisions and possibly also sublimation.Comment: 16 pages, accepted by ApJ, removed HD128400 as hot dust candidat
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