The stars that populate the solar neighbourhood were formed in stellar
clusters. Through N-body simulations of these clusters, we measure the rate of
close encounters between stars. By monitoring the interaction histories of each
star, we investigate the singleton fraction in the solar neighbourhood. A
singleton is a star which formed as a single star, has never experienced any
close encounters with other stars or binaries, or undergone an exchange
encounter with a binary. We find that, of the stars which formed as single
stars, a significant fraction are not singletons once the clusters have
dispersed. If some of these stars had planetary systems, with properties
similar to those of the solar system, the planets orbits may have been
perturbed by the effects of close encounters with other stars or the effects of
a companion star within a binary. Such perturbations can lead to strong
planet-planet interactions which eject several planets, leaving the remaining
planets on eccentric orbits. Some of the single stars exchange into binaries.
Most of these binaries are broken up via subsequent interactions within the
cluster, but some remain intact beyond the lifetime of the cluster. The
properties of these binaries are similar to those of the observed binary
systems containing extra-solar planets. Thus, dynamical processes in young
stellar clusters will alter significantly any population of solar-system-like
planetary systems. In addition, beginning with a population of planetary
systems exactly resembling the solar system around single stars, dynamical
encounters in young stellar clusters may produce at least some of the
extra-solar planetary systems observed in the solar neighbourhood.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRA