2,272 research outputs found
Giant Planet Formation: A First Classification of Isothermal Protoplanetary Equilibria
We present a model for the equilibrium of solid planetary cores embedded in a
gaseous nebula. From this model we are able to extract an idealized roadmap of
all hydrostatic states of the isothermal protoplanets. The complete
classification of the isothermal protoplanetary equilibria should improve the
understanding of the general problem of giant planet formation, within the
framework of the nucleated instability hypothesis. We approximate the
protoplanet as a spherically symmetric, isothermal, self-gravitating classical
ideal gas envelope in equilibrium, around a rigid body of given mass and
density, with the gaseous envelope required to fill the Hill-sphere. Starting
only with a core of given mass and an envelope gas density at the core surface,
the equilibria are calculated without prescribing the total protoplanetary mass
or nebula density. The static critical core masses of the protoplanets for the
typical orbits of 1, 5.2, and 30 AU, around a parent star of 1 solar mass are
found to be 0.1524, 0.0948, and 0.0335 Earth masses, respectively, for standard
nebula conditions (Kusaka et al. 1970). These values are much lower than
currently admitted ones primarily because our model is isothermal and the
envelope is in thermal equilibrium with the nebula. For a given core, multiple
solutions (at least two) are found to fit into the same nebula. We extend the
concept of the static critical core mass to the local and global critical core
mass. We conclude that the 'global static critical core mass' marks the meeting
point of all four qualitatively different envelope regions.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figure
The formation of HD 149026 b
Today, many extrasolar planets have been detected. Some of them exhibit
properties quite different from the planets in our solar system and they have
eluded attempts to explain their formation. One such case is HD 149026 b. It
was discovered by Sato et al. (2005) . A transit-determined orbital inclination
results in a total mass of 114 earth masses. The unusually small radius can be
explained by a condensible element core with an inferred mass of 67 earth
masses for the best fitting theoretical model.
In the core accretion model, giant planets are assumed to form around a
growing core of condensible materials. With increasing core mass, the amount of
gravitationally bound envelope mass increases. This continues up to the
so-called critical core mass -- the largest core allowing a hydrostatic
envelope. For larger cores, the lack of static solutions forces a dynamic
evolution of the protoplanet in the process accreting large amounts of gas or
ejecting the envelope. This would prevent the formation of HD 149026 b.
By studying all possible hydrostatic equilibria we could show that HD 149026
b can remain hydrostatic up to the inferred heavy core. This is possible if it
is formed in-situ in a relatively low-pressure nebula. This formation process
is confirmed by fluid-dynamic calculations using the environmental conditions
as determined by the hydrostatic models.
We present a quantitative in-situ formation scenario for the massive core
planet HD 149026 b. Furthermore we predict a wide range of possible core masses
for close-in planets like HD 149026 b. This is different from migration where
typical critical core masses should be expected.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, letter MNRAS accepted 2007 Jan
CoRoT's first seven planets: An overview
The up to 150 day uninterrupted high-precision photometry of about 100000
stars - provided so far by the exoplanet channel of the CoRoT space telescope -
gave a new perspective on the planet population of our galactic neighbourhood.
The seven planets with very accurate parameters widen the range of known planet
properties in almost any respect. Giant planets have been detected at low
metallicity, rapidly rotating and active, spotted stars. CoRoT-3 populated the
brown dwarf desert and closed the gap of measured physical properties between
standard giant planets and very low mass stars. CoRoT extended the known range
of planet masses down to 5 Earth masses and up to 21 Jupiter masses, the radii
to less than 2 Earth radii and up to the most inflated hot Jupiter found so
far, and the periods of planets discovered by transits to 9 days. Two CoRoT
planets have host stars with the lowest content of heavy elements known to show
a transit hinting towards a different planet-host-star-metallicity relation
then the one found by radial-velocity search programs. Finally the properties
of the CoRoT-7b prove that terrestrial planets with a density close to Earth
exist outside the Solar System. The detection of the secondary transit of
CoRoT-1 at the -level and the very clear detection of the 1.7 Earth
radii of CoRoT-7b at relative flux are promising evidence of
CoRoT being able to detect even smaller, Earth sized planets.Comment: 8 pages, 19 figures and 3 table
The first million years of the Sun: A calculation of formation and early evolution of a solar-mass star
We present the first coherent dynamical study of the cloud
fragmentation-phase, collapse and early stellar evolution of a solar mass star.
We determine young star properties as the consequence of the parent cloud
evolution. Mass, luminosity and effective temperature in the first million
years of the proto-Sun result from gravitational fragmentation of a molecular
cloud region that produces a cluster of prestellar clumps. We calculate the
global dynamical behavior of the cloud using isothermal 3D hydrodynamics and
follow the evolution of individual protostars in detail using a 1D
radiation-fluid-dynamic system of equations that comprises a correct standard
solar model solution, as a limiting case. We calculate the pre-main sequence
(PMS) evolutionary tracks of a solar mass star in a dense stellar cluster
environment and compare it to one that forms in isolation. Up to an age of
950.000 years differences in the accretion history lead to significantly
different temperature and luminosity evolution. As accretion fades and the
stars approach their final masses the two dynamic PMS tracks converge. After
that the contraction of the quasi-hydrostatic stellar interiors dominate the
overall stellar properties and proceed in very similar ways. Hence the position
of a star in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram becomes a function of age and mass
only. However, our quantitative description of cloud fragmentation, star
formation and early stellar evolution predicts substantial corrections to the
classical, i.e. hydrostatic and initially fully convective models: At an age of
1 million years the proto-Sun is twice as bright and 500 Kelvin hotter than
according to calculations that neglect the star formation process.Comment: Four pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Orbital Migration and Mass Accretion of Protoplanets in 3D Global Computations with Nested Grids
We investigate the evolution of protoplanets with different masses embedded
in an accretion disk, via global fully three-dimensional hydrodynamical
simulations. We consider a range of planetary masses extending from one and a
half Earth's masses up to one Jupiter's mass, and we take into account
physically realistic gravitational potentials of forming planets. In order to
calculate accurately the gravitational torques exerted by disk material and to
investigate the accretion process onto the planet, the flow dynamics has to be
thoroughly resolved on long as well as short length scales. We achieve this
strict resolution requirement by applying a nested-grid refinement technique
which allows to greatly enhance the local resolution. Our results from
altogether 51 simulations show that for large planetary masses, approximately
above a tenth of the Jupiter's mass, migration rates are relatively constant,
as expected in type II migration regime and in good agreement with previous
two-dimensional calculations. In a range between seven and fifteen Earth's
masses, we find a dependency of the migration speed on the planetary mass that
yields time scales considerably longer than those predicted by linear
analytical theories. This property may be important in determining the overall
orbital evolution of protoplanets. The growth time scale is minimum around
twenty Earth-masses, but it rapidly increases for both smaller and larger mass
values. Significant differences between two- and three-dimensional calculations
are found in particular for objects with masses smaller than ten Earth-masses.
We also derive an analytical approximation for the numerically computed mass
growth rates.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures. To appear in The Astrophysical Journal vol.586
(March 20, 2003 issue
Planetary migration in evolving planetesimals discs
In the current paper, we further improved the model for the migration of
planets introduced in Del Popolo et al. (2001) and extended to time-dependent
planetesimal accretion disks in Del Popolo and Eksi (2002). In the current
study, the assumption of Del Popolo and Eksi (2002), that the surface density
in planetesimals is proportional to that of gas, is released. In order to
obtain the evolution of planetesimal density, we use a method developed in
Stepinski and Valageas (1997) which is able to simultaneously follow the
evolution of gas and solid particles for up to 10^7 yrs. Then, the disk model
is coupled to migration model introduced in Del Popolo et al. (2001) in order
to obtain the migration rate of the planet in the planetesimal. We find that
the properties of solids known to exist in protoplanetary systems, together
with reasonable density profiles for the disk, lead to a characteristic radius
in the range 0.03-0.2 AU for the final semi-major axis of the giant planet.Comment: IJMP A in prin
An Investigation into the Radial Velocity Variations of CoRoT-7
CoRoT-7b, the first transiting ``superearth'' exoplanet, has a radius of 1.7
R_Earth and a mass of 4.8 M_Earth. Ground-based radial velocity measurements
also detected an additional companion with a period of 3.7 days (CoRoT-7c) and
a mass of 8.4 M_Earth. The mass of CoRoT-7b is a crucial parameter for planet
structure models, but is difficult to determine because CoRoT-7 is a modestly
active star and there is at least one additional companion. A Fourier analysis
was performed on spectral data for CoRoT-7 taken with the HARPS spectrograph.
These data include RV measurements, spectral line bisectors, the full width at
half maximum of the cross-correlation function, and Ca II emission. The latter
3 quantities vary due to stellar activity and were used to assess the nature of
the observed RV variations. An analysis of a sub-set of the RV measurements
where multiple observations were made per night was also used to estimate the
RV amplitude from CoRoT-7b that was less sensitive to activity variations. Our
analysis indicates that the 0.85-d and 3.7-d RV signals of CoRoT-7b and
CoRoT-7c are present in the spectral data with a high degree of statistical
significance. We also find evidence for another significant RV signal at 9
days. An analysis of the activity indicator data reveals that this 9-d signal
most likely does not arise from activity, but possibly from an additional
companion. If due to a planetary companion the mass is m = 19.5 M_Earth,
assuming co-planarity with CoRoT-7b. A dynamical study of the three planet
system shows that it is stable over several hundred millions of years. Our
analysis yields a RV amplitude of 5.04 +/- 1.09 m/s for CoRoT-7b which
corresponds to a planet mass of m = 6.9 +/- 1.4 M_Earth. This increased mass
would make the planet CoRoT-7b more Earth-like in its internal structure.Comment: 20 pages, 20 figure
Critical Protoplanetary Core Masses in Protoplanetary Disks and the Formation of Short-Period Giant Planets
We study a solid protoplanetary core of 1-10 earth masses migrating through a
disk. We suppose the core luminosity is generated as a result of planetesimal
accretion and calculate the structure of the gaseous envelope assuming
equilibrium. This is a good approximation when the core mass is less than the
critical value, M_{crit}, above which rapid gas accretion begins. We model the
structure of the protoplanetary nebula as an accretion disk with constant
\alpha. We present analytic fits for the steady state relation between disk
surface density and mass accretion rate as a function of radius r. We calculate
M_{crit} as a function of r, gas accretion rate through the disk, and
planetesimal accretion rate onto the core \dot{M}. For a fixed \dot{M},
M_{crit} increases inwards, and it decreases with \dot{M}. We find that \dot{M}
onto cores migrating inwards in a time 10^3-10^5 yr at 1 AU is sufficient to
prevent the attainment of M_{crit} during the migration process. Only at small
radii where planetesimals no longer exist can M_{crit} be attained. At small
radii, the runaway gas accretion phase may become longer than the disk lifetime
if the core mass is too small. However, massive cores can be built-up through
the merger of additional incoming cores on a timescale shorter than for in situ
formation. Therefore, feeding zone depletion in the neighborhood of a fixed
orbit may be avoided. Accordingly, we suggest that giant planets may begin to
form early in the life of the protostellar disk at small radii, on a timescale
that may be significantly shorter than for in situ formation. (abridged)Comment: 24 pages (including 9 figures), LaTeX, uses emulateapj.sty, to be
published in ApJ, also available at http://www.ucolick.org/~ct/home.htm
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