Debris disks as signposts of terrestrial planet formation

@article{Raymond2011DebrisDA,
  title={Debris disks as signposts of terrestrial planet formation},
  author={Sean N. Raymond and Philip J. Armitage and Amaya Moro-Martin and Mark Booth and Mark C. Wyatt and John Charles Armstrong and Avi M. Mandell and Franck Selsis and Andrew A. West},
  journal={Astronomy and Astrophysics},
  year={2011},
  volume={530}
}
There exists strong circumstantial evidence from their eccentric orbits that most of the known extra-solar planetary systems are the survivors of violent dynamical instabilities. Here we explore the effect of giant planet instabilities on the formation and survival of terrestrial planets. We numerically simulate the evolution of planetary systems around Sun-like stars that include three components: (i) an inner disk of planetesimals and planetary embryos; (ii) three giant planets at Jupiter… 

The debris disk – terrestrial planet connection

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  • A. Morbidelli
  • Geology, Physics
    Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
  • 2014
It is concluded that Earth-like planets should not expect to be typical in terms of physical and orbital properties and accretion history, and most habitable worlds are probably different, exotic worlds.

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