1,283 research outputs found
Apocenter glow in eccentric debris disks: implications for Fomalhaut and epsilon Eridani
Debris disks often take the form of eccentric rings with azimuthal
asymmetries in surface brightness. Such disks are often described as showing
"pericenter glow", an enhancement of the disk brightness in regions nearest the
central star. At long wavelengths, however, the disk apocenters should appear
brighter than their pericenters: in the long wavelength limit, we find the
apocenter/pericenter flux ratio scales as 1+e for disk eccentricity e. We
produce new models of this "apocenter glow" to explore its causes and
wavelength dependence and study its potential as a probe of dust grain
properties. Based on our models, we argue that several far-infrared and
(sub)millimeter images of the Fomalhaut and epsilon Eridani debris rings
obtained with Herschel, JCMT, SHARC II, ALMA, and ATCA should be reinterpreted
as suggestions or examples of apocenter glow. This reinterpretation yields new
constraints on the disks' dust grain properties and size distributions.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures; accepted to Ap
The Deflector Selector: A Machine Learning Framework for Prioritizing Hazardous Object Deflection Technology Development
Several technologies have been proposed for deflecting a hazardous Solar
System object on a trajectory that would otherwise impact the Earth. The
effectiveness of each technology depends on several characteristics of the
given object, including its orbit and size. The distribution of these
parameters in the likely population of Earth-impacting objects can thus
determine which of the technologies are most likely to be useful in preventing
a collision with the Earth. None of the proposed deflection technologies has
been developed and fully tested in space. Developing every proposed technology
is currently prohibitively expensive, so determining now which technologies are
most likely to be effective would allow us to prioritize a subset of proposed
deflection technologies for funding and development. We present a new model,
the Deflector Selector, that takes as its input the characteristics of a
hazardous object or population of such objects and predicts which technology
would be able to perform a successful deflection. The model consists of a
machine-learning algorithm trained on data produced by N-body integrations
simulating the deflections. We describe the model and present the results of
tests of the effectiveness of nuclear explosives, kinetic impactors, and
gravity tractors on three simulated populations of hazardous objects.Comment: 45 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Acta Astronautic
A Collisional Algorithm for Modeling Circumstellar Debris Disks
Many planetary systems harbor circumstellar disks of dust and planetesimals thought to be debris left over from planet formation. These debris disks exhibit a range of morphological features which can arise from the gravitational perturbations of planets. Accurate models of these features, accounting for the interactions of the particles in a disk with each other and with whatever planets they contain, can act as signposts for planets in debris disks that otherwise could not be detected. Such models can also constrain the planet's mass and orbital parameters. Current models for many disks consider the gravitational and radiative effects of the star and planets on the disk, but neglect the morphological consequences of collisional interactions between the planetesimals. Many observed disk features are not satisfactorily explained by the current generation of models. I am developing a new kind of debris disk model that considers both the gravitational shaping of the disk by planets and the inelastic collisions between particles. I will use a hybrid N-body integrator to numerically solve the equations of motion for the particles and planets in the disk. To include the collisional effects, I begin with an algorithm that tests for collisions at each step of the orbit integration and readjusts the velocities of colliding particles. I am adapting this algorithm to the problem at hand by allowing each particle to represent a "swarm" of planetesimals with a range of masses. When the algorithm detects an encounter between swarms, two or three swarms are produced to approximate the range of possible trajectories of the daughter planetesimals. Here I present preliminary results from my collisional algorithm
Finding the Needles in the Haystacks: High-Fidelity Models of the Modern and Archean Solar System for Simulating Exoplanet Observations
We present two state-of-the-art models of the solar system, one corresponding
to the present day and one to the Archean Eon 3.5 billion years ago. Each model
contains spatial and spectral information for the star, the planets, and the
interplanetary dust, extending to 50 AU from the sun and covering the
wavelength range 0.3 to 2.5 micron. In addition, we created a spectral image
cube representative of the astronomical backgrounds that will be seen behind
deep observations of extrasolar planetary systems, including galaxies and Milky
Way stars. These models are intended as inputs to high-fidelity simulations of
direct observations of exoplanetary systems using telescopes equipped with
high-contrast capability. They will help improve the realism of observation and
instrument parameters that are required inputs to statistical observatory yield
calculations, as well as guide development of post-processing algorithms for
telescopes capable of directly imaging Earth-like planets.Comment: Accepted for publication in PAS
Disk Detective: Discovery of New Circumstellar Disk Candidates through Citizen Science
The Disk Detective citizen science project aims to find new stars with 22
micron excess emission from circumstellar dust using data from NASA's WISE
mission. Initial cuts on the AllWISE catalog provide an input catalog of
277,686 sources. Volunteers then view images of each source online in 10
different bands to identify false-positives (galaxies, background stars,
interstellar matter, image artifacts, etc.). Sources that survive this online
vetting are followed up with spectroscopy on the FLWO Tillinghast telescope.
This approach should allow us to unleash the full potential of WISE for finding
new debris disks and protoplanetary disks. We announce a first list of 37 new
disk candidates discovered by the project, and we describe our vetting and
follow-up process. One of these systems appears to contain the first debris
disk discovered around a star with a white dwarf companion: HD 74389. We also
report four newly discovered classical Be stars (HD 6612, HD 7406, HD 164137,
and HD 218546) and a new detection of 22 micron excess around a previously
known debris disk host star, HD 22128.Comment: 50 pages, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
SMACK: A New Algorithm for Modeling Collisions and Dynamics of Planetesimals in Debris Disks
We present the Superparticle Model/Algorithm for Collisions in Kuiper belts and debris disks (SMACK), a new method for simultaneously modeling, in 3-D, the collisional and dynamical evolution of planetesimals in a debris disk with planets. SMACK can simulate azimuthal asymmetries and how these asymmetries evolve over time. We show that SMACK is stable to numerical viscosity and numerical heating over 10(exp 7) yr, and that it can reproduce analytic models of disk evolution. We use SMACK to model the evolution of a debris ring containing a planet on an eccentric orbit. Differential precession creates a spiral structure as the ring evolves, but collisions subsequently break up the spiral, leaving a narrower eccentric ring
Discovery of an Inner Disk Component around HD 141569 A
We report the discovery of a scattering component around the HD 141569 A
circumstellar debris system, interior to the previously known inner ring. The
discovered inner disk component, obtained in broadband optical light with
HST/STIS coronagraphy, was imaged with an inner working angle of 0".25, and can
be traced from 0".4 (~46 AU) to 1".0 (~116 AU) after deprojection using
i=55deg. The inner disk component is seen to forward scatter in a manner
similar to the previously known rings, has a pericenter offset of ~6 AU, and
break points where the slope of the surface brightness changes. It also has a
spiral arm trailing in the same sense as other spiral arms and arcs seen at
larger stellocentric distances. The inner disk spatially overlaps with the
previously reported warm gas disk seen in thermal emission. We detect no point
sources within 2" (~232 AU), in particular in the gap between the inner disk
component and the inner ring. Our upper limit of 9+/-3 M_J is augmented by a
new dynamical limit on single planetary mass bodies in the gap between the
inner disk component and the inner ring of 1 M_J, which is broadly consistent
with previous estimates.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ
Communication Breakdown: Developing an Antitrust Model for Multimedia Mergers and Acquisitions
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