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…
Figures and Tables from this paper
145 Citations
The debris disk – terrestrial planet connection
- Physics, GeologyProceedings of the International Astronomical Union
- 2010
Abstract The eccentric orbits of the known extrasolar giant planets provide evidence that most planet-forming environments undergo violent dynamical instabilities. Here, we numerically simulate the…
Formation of terrestrial planets in eccentric and inclined giant planet systems
- Geology, Physics
- 2016
Evidence of mutually inclined planetary orbits has been reported for giant planets these last years. Here we aim to study the impact of eccentric and inclined massive giant planets on the terrestrial…
Scenarios of giant planet formation and evolution and their impact on the formation of habitable terrestrial planets
- Geology, PhysicsPhilosophical 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.
EFFECTS OF DYNAMICAL EVOLUTION OF GIANT PLANETS ON SURVIVAL OF TERRESTRIAL PLANETS
- Physics, Geology
- 2013
The orbital distributions of currently observed extrasolar giant planets allow marginally stable orbits for hypothetical, terrestrial planets. In this paper, we propose that many of these systems may…
Formation of planetary systems by pebble accretion and migration
- Geology, PhysicsAstronomy & Astrophysics
- 2021
At least 30% of main sequence stars host planets with sizes of between 1 and 4 Earth radii and orbital periods of less than 100 days. We use N-body simulations including a model for gas-assisted…
Debris Disks: Probing Planet Formation
- Geology, Physics
- 2018
Debris disks are the dust disks found around ~20% of nearby main sequence stars in far-IR surveys. They can be considered as descendants of protoplanetary disks or components of planetary systems,…
Survival of habitable planets in unstable planetary systems
- Physics, Geology
- 2016
Many observed giant planets lie on eccentric orbits. Such orbits could be the result of strong scatterings with other giant planets. The same dynamical instability that produces giant planet…
EFFECTS OF DYNAMICAL EVOLUTION OF GIANT PLANETS ON THE DELIVERY OF ATMOPHILE ELEMENTS DURING TERRESTRIAL PLANET FORMATION
- Physics, Geology
- 2015
Recent observations started revealing the compositions of protostellar disks and planets beyond the solar system. In this paper, we explore how the compositions of terrestrial planets are affected by…
THE DESTRUCTION OF INNER PLANETARY SYSTEMS DURING HIGH-ECCENTRICITY MIGRATION OF GAS GIANTS
- Geology, Physics
- 2015
Hot Jupiters are giant planets on orbits of a few hundredths of an AU. They do not share their system with low-mass close-in planets, despite the latter being exceedingly common. Two migration…
Mini-Oort clouds: compact isotropic planetesimal clouds from planet–planet scattering
- Physics, Geology
- 2013
Starting from planetary systems with three giant planets and an outer disk of planetesimals, we use dynamical simulations to show how dynamical instabilities can transform planetesimal disks into…
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 217 REFERENCES
On the formation of terrestrial planets in hot-Jupiter systems
- Geology, Physics
- 2007
Context. There are numerous extrasolar giant planets which orbit close to their central stars. These “hot-Jupiters” probably formed in the outer, cooler regions of their protoplanetary disks, and…
Formation of Earth-like Planets During and After Giant Planet Migration
- Geology, Physics
- 2007
Close-in giant planets are thought to have formed in the cold outer regions of planetary systems and migrated inward, passing through the orbital parameter space occupied by the terrestrial planets…
The Search for Other Earths: Limits on the Giant Planet Orbits That Allow Habitable Terrestrial Planets to Form
- Geology, Physics
- 2006
Gas giant planets are far easier than terrestrial planets to detect around other stars, and they are thought to form much more quickly than terrestrial planets. Thus, in systems with giant planets,…
Orbital Evolution of Planets Embedded in a Planetesimal Disk
- Physics, Geology
- 1999
The existence of the Oort comet cloud, the Kuiper belt, and plausible inefficiencies in planetary core formation all suggest that there was once a residual planetesimal disk of mass ∼10–100 M⊕ in the…
PLANET–PLANET SCATTERING IN PLANETESIMAL DISKS. II. PREDICTIONS FOR OUTER EXTRASOLAR PLANETARY SYSTEMS
- Physics, Geology
- 2010
We develop an idealized dynamical model to predict the typical properties of outer extrasolar planetary systems, at radii comparable to the Jupiter-to-Neptune region of the solar system. The model is…
Dynamical Outcomes of Planet-Planet Scattering
- Physics, Geology
- 2008
Observations in the past decade have revealed extrasolar planets with a wide range of orbital semimajor axes and eccentricities. Based on the present understanding of planet formation via core…
Debris disks: seeing dust, thinking of planetesimals and planets
- Physics, Geology
- 2010
Debris disks are optically thin, almost gas-free dusty disks observed around a significant fraction of main-sequence stars older than about 10 Myr. Since the circumstellar dust is short-lived, the…
Predictions for the Correlation between Giant and Terrestrial Extrasolar Planets in Dynamically Evolved Systems
- Physics, Geology
- 2006
The large eccentricities of many giant extrasolar planets may represent the endpoint of gravitational scattering in initially more crowded systems. If so, the early evolution of the giant planets is…
Evolution of Debris Disks
- Geology, Physics
- 2008
Circumstellar dust exists around several hundred main sequence stars. For the youngest stars, that dust could be a remnant of the protoplanetary disk. Mostly it is inferred to be continuously…
Origins of Eccentric Extrasolar Planets: Testing the Planet-Planet Scattering Model
- Geology, Physics
- 2008
In planetary systems with two or more giant planets, dynamical instabilities can lead to collisions or ejections through strong planet-planet scattering. Previous studies for initial conditions with…