48 research outputs found
Probing the turbulent mixing strength in protoplanetary disks across the stellar mass range: no significant variations
Dust settling and grain growth are the first steps in the planet-formation
process in protoplanetary disks. These disks are observed around stars with
different spectral types, and there are indications that the disks around lower
mass stars are significantly flatter, which could indicate that they settle and
evolve faster, or in a different way.
We aim to test this assumption by modeling the median spectral energy
distributions (SEDs) of three samples of protoplanetary disks: around Herbig
stars, T Tauri stars and brown dwarfs. We focus on the turbulent mixing
strength to avoid a strong observational bias from disk and stellar properties
that depend on stellar mass.
We generated SEDs with the radiative transfer code MCMax, using a hydrostatic
disk structure and settling the dust in a self-consistent way with the
alpha-prescription to probe the turbulent mixing strength.
We are able to fit all three samples with a disk with the same input
parameters, scaling the inner edge to the dust evaporation radius and disk mass
to millimeter photometry. The Herbig stars require a special treatment for the
inner rim regions, while the T-Tauri stars require viscous heating, and the
brown dwarfs lack a good estimate of the disk mass because only few millimeter
detections exist.
We find that the turbulent mixing strength does not vary across the stellar
mass range for a fixed grain size distribution and gas-to-dust ratio. Regions
with the same temperature have a self-similar vertical structure independent of
stellar mass, but regions at the same distance from the central star appear
more settled in disks around lower mass stars. We find a relatively low
turbulent mixing strength of alpha = 10^(-4) for a standard grain size
distribution, but our results are also consistent with alpha = 0.01 for a grain
size distribution with fewer small grains or a lower gas-to-dust ratio.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, accepted by A&
Where are the Water Worlds? Identifying the Exo-water-worlds Using Models of Planet Formation and Atmospheric Evolution
Planet formation models suggest that the small exoplanets that migrate from
beyond the snowline of the protoplanetary disk likely contain water-ice-rich
cores ( by mass), also known as the water worlds. While the observed
radius valley of the Kepler planets is well explained with the atmospheric
dichotomy of the rocky planets, precise measurements of mass and radius of the
transiting planets hint at the existence of these water worlds. However,
observations cannot confirm the core compositions of those planets owing to the
degeneracy between the density of a bare water-ice-rich planet and the bulk
density of a rocky planet with a thin atmosphere. We combine different
formation models from the Genesis library with atmospheric escape models, such
as photo-evaporation and impact stripping, to simulate planetary systems
consistent with the observed radius valley. We then explore the possibility of
water worlds being present in the currently observed sample by comparing them
with the simulated planets in the mass-radius-orbital period space. We find
that the migration models suggest and of the bare
planets, i.e. planets without primordial H/He atmospheres, to be water-ice-rich
around G- and M-type host stars respectively, consistent with the mass-radius
distributions of the observed planets. However, most of the water worlds are
predicted to be outside a period of 10 days. A unique identification of water
worlds through radial velocity and transmission spectroscopy is likely to be
more successful when targeting such planets with longer orbital periods.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, a csv file containing analyzed
observational data is attache
The Exoplanet Population Observation Simulator. I - The Inner Edges of Planetary Systems
The Kepler survey provides a statistical census of planetary systems out to
the habitable zone. Because most planets are non-transiting, orbital
architectures are best estimated using simulated observations of ensemble
populations. Here, we introduce EPOS, the Exoplanet Population Observation
Simulator, to estimate the prevalence and orbital architectures of multi-planet
systems based on the latest Kepler data release, DR25. We estimate that at
least 42% of sun-like stars have nearly coplanar planetary systems with 7 or
more exoplanets. The fraction of stars with at least one planet within 1 au
could be as high as 100% depending on assumptions about the distribution of
single transiting planets. We estimate an occurrence rate of planets in the
habitable zone around sun-like stars of eta_earth=36+-14%. The innermost
planets in multi-planet systems are clustered around an orbital period of 10
days (0.1 au), reminiscent of the protoplanetary disk inner edge or could be
explained by a planet trap at that location. Only a small fraction of planetary
systems have the innermost planet at long orbital periods, with fewer than ~8%
and ~3% having no planet interior to the orbit of Mercury and Venus,
respectively. These results reinforce the view that the solar system is not a
typical planetary system, but an outlier among the distribution of known
exoplanetary systems. We predict that at least half of the habitable zone
exoplanets are accompanied by (non-transiting) planets at shorter orbital
periods, hence knowledge of a close-in exoplanet could be used as a way to
optimize the search for Earth-size planets in the Habitable Zone with future
direct imaging missions.Comment: Accepted in AAS journals, code available on githu
Earths in Other Solar Systems N-body simulations: the Role of Orbital Damping in Reproducing the Kepler Planetary Systems
The population of exoplanetary systems detected by Kepler provides
opportunities to refine our understanding of planet formation. Unraveling the
conditions needed to produce the observed exoplanets will sallow us to make
informed predictions as to where habitable worlds exist within the galaxy. In
this paper, we examine using N-body simulations how the properties of planetary
systems are determined during the final stages of assembly. While accretion is
a chaotic process, trends in the ensemble properties of planetary systems
provide a memory of the initial distribution of solid mass around a star prior
to accretion. We also use EPOS, the Exoplanet Population Observation Simulator,
to account for detection biases and show that different accretion scenarios can
be distinguished from observations of the Kepler systems. We show that the
period of the innermost planet, the ratio of orbital periods of adjacent
planets, and masses of the planets are determined by the total mass and radial
distribution of embryos and planetesimals at the beginning of accretion. In
general, some amount of orbital damping, either via planetesimals or gas,
during accretion is needed to match the whole population of exoplanets.
Surprisingly, all simulated planetary systems have planets that are similar in
size, showing that the "peas in a pod" pattern can be consistent with both a
giant impact scenario and a planet migration scenario. The inclusion of
material at distances larger than what Kepler observes has a profound impact on
the observed planetary architectures, and thus on the formation and delivery of
volatiles to possible habitable worlds.Comment: Resubmitted to ApJ. Planet formation models available online at
http://eos-nexus.org/genesis-database
The Exoplanet Population Observation Simulator. II -- Population Synthesis in the Era of Kepler
The collection of planetary system properties derived from large surveys such
as Kepler provides critical constraints on planet formation and evolution.
These constraints can only be applied to planet formation models, however, if
the observational biases and selection effects are properly accounted for. Here
we show how epos, the Exoplanet Population Observation Simulator, can be used
to constrain planet formation models by comparing the Bern planet population
synthesis models to the Kepler exoplanetary systems. We compile a series of
diagnostics, based on occurrence rates of different classes of planets and the
architectures of multi-planet systems, that can be used as benchmarks for
future and current modeling efforts. Overall, we find that a model with 100
seed planetary cores per protoplanetary disk provides a reasonable match to
most diagnostics. Based on these diagnostics we identify physical properties
and processes that would result in the Bern model more closely matching the
known planetary systems. These are: moving the planet trap at the inner disk
edge outward; increasing the formation efficiency of mini-Neptunes; and
reducing the fraction of stars that form observable planets. We conclude with
an outlook on the composition of planets in the habitable zone, and highlight
that the majority of simulated planets smaller than 1.7 Earth radii have
substantial hydrogen atmospheres.
The software used in this paper is available online for public scrutiny at
https://github.com/GijsMulders/eposComment: Accepted in Ap
Resolved images of the protoplanetary disk around HD 100546 with ALMA
The disk around the Herbig Ae/Be star HD 100546 has been extensively studied
and it is one of the systems for which there are observational indications of
ongoing and/or recent planet formation. However, up until now no resolved image
of the millimeter dust emission or the gas has been published. We present the
first resolved images of the disk around HD 100546 obtained in Band 7 with the
ALMA observatory. The CO (3-2) image reveals a gas disk that extends out to 350
au radius at the 3-sigma level. Surprisingly, the 870um dust continuum emission
is compact (radius <60 au) and asymmetric. The dust emission is well matched by
a truncated disk with outer radius of 50 au. The lack of
millimeter-sized particles outside the 60 au is consistent with radial drift of
particles of this size. The protoplanet candidate, identified in previous
high-contrast NACO/VLT L' observations, could be related to the sharp outer
edge of the millimeter-sized particles. Future higher angular resolution ALMA
observations are needed to determine the detailed properties of the millimeter
emission and the gas kinematics in the inner region (<2arcsec). Such
observations could also reveal the presence of a planet through the detection
of circumplanetary disk material.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted in ApJ
Constraints from Dust Mass and Mass Accretion Rate Measurements on Angular Momentum Transport in Protoplanetary Disks
We investigate the relation between disk mass and mass accretion rate to
constrain the mechanism of angular momentum transport in protoplanetary disks.
Dust mass and mass accretion rate in Chamaeleon I are correlated with a slope
close to linear, similar to the one recently identified in Lupus. We
investigate the effect of stellar mass and find that the intrinsic scatter
around the best-fit Mdust-Mstar and Macc-Mstar relations is uncorrelated. Disks
with a constant alpha viscosity can fit the observed relations between dust
mass, mass accretion rate, and stellar mass, but over-predict the strength of
the correlation between disk mass and mass accretion rate when using standard
initial conditions. We find two possible solutions. 1) The observed scatter in
Mdust and Macc is not primoridal, but arises from additional physical processes
or uncertainties in estimating the disk gas mass. Most likely grain growth and
radial drift affect the observable dust mass, while variability on large time
scales affects the mass accretion rates. 2) The observed scatter is primordial,
but disks have not evolved substantially at the age of Lupus and Chamaeleon I
due to a low viscosity or a large initial disk radius. More accurate estimates
of the disk mass and gas disk sizes in a large sample of protoplanetary disks,
either through direct observations of the gas or spatially resolved
multi-wavelength observations of the dust with ALMA, are needed to discriminate
between both scenarios or to constrain alternative angular momentum transport
mechanisms such as MHD disk winds.Comment: See also the paper by Lodato et a
Hints for a Turnover at the Snow Line in the Giant Planet Occurrence Rate
The orbital distribution of giant planets is crucial for understanding how
terrestrial planets form and predicting yields of exoplanet surveys. Here, we
derive giant planets occurrence rates as a function of orbital period by taking
into account the detection efficiency of the Kepler and radial velocity (RV)
surveys. The giant planet occurrence rates for Kepler and RV show the same
rising trend with increasing distance from the star. We identify a break in the
RV giant planet distribution between ~2-3 au -- close to the location of the
snow line in the Solar System -- after which the occurrence rate decreases with
distance from the star. Extrapolating a broken power-law distribution to larger
semi-major axes, we find good agreement with the ~ 1% planet occurrence rates
from direct imaging surveys. Assuming a symmetric power law, we also estimate
that the occurrence of giant planets between 0.1-100 au is 26.6 +7.5 -5.4% for
planets with masses 0.1-20MJ and decreases to 6.2 +1.5 -1.2% for planets more
massive than Jupiter. This implies that only a fraction of the structures
detected in disks around young stars can be attributed to giant planets.
Various planet population synthesis models show good agreement with the
observed distribution, and we show how a quantitative comparison between model
and data can be used to constrain planet formation and migration mechanisms.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
An ALMA Survey of faint disks in the Chamaeleon I star-forming region: Why are some Class II disks so faint?
ALMA surveys of nearby star-forming regions have shown that the dust mass in
the disk is correlated with the stellar mass, but with a large scatter. This
scatter could indicate either different evolutionary paths of disks or
different initial conditions within a single cluster. We present ALMA Cycle 3
follow-up observations for 14 Class II disks that were low S/N detections or
non-detections in our Cycle 2 survey of the Myr-old Chamaeleon I
star-forming region. With 5 times better sensitivity, we detect millimeter dust
continuum emission from six more sources and increase the detection rate to
94\% (51/54) for Chamaeleon I disks around stars earlier than M3. The
stellar-disk mass scaling relation reported in \citet{pascucci2016} is
confirmed with these updated measurements. Faint outliers in the
-- plane include three non-detections (CHXR71, CHXR30A, and T54)
with dust mass upper limits of 0.2 M and three very faint disks
(CHXR20, ISO91, and T51) with dust masses M. By
investigating the SED morphology, accretion property and stellar multiplicity,
we suggest for the three millimeter non-detections that tidal interaction by a
close companion (100 AU) and internal photoevaporation may play a role in
hastening the overall disk evolution. The presence of a disk around only the
secondary star in a binary system may explain the observed stellar SEDs and low
disk masses for some systems.Comment: ApJ accepte