Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Constraining giant planet formation with synthetic ALMA images of the Solar System's natal protoplanetary disk
View through CrossRef
<p>New ALMA observations of protoplanetary disks allow us to probe planet formation in other planetary systems, giving us new constraints on planet formation processes. Meanwhile, studies of our own Solar System rely on constraints derived in a completely different way. However, it is still unclear what features the Solar System protoplanetary disk could have produced during its gas phase. By running 2D isothermal hydro-simulations used as inputs for a dust evolution model, we derive synthetic images at millimeter wavelengths using the radiative transfer code RADMC3D. We find that the embedded multiple giant planets strongly perturb the radial gas velocities of the disk. These velocity perturbations create traffic jams in the dust, producing over-densities different from the ones created by pressure traps and located away from the planets&#8217; positions in the disk. By deriving the images at &#955; = 1.3 mm from these dust distributions, we show that very high resolution observations are needed to distinguish the most important features expected in the inner part (<15 AU) of the disk. The traffic jams, observable with a high resolution, further blur the link between the number of gaps and rings in disks and the number of embedded planets. We additionally show that a system capable of producing eccentric planets by scattering events that match the eccentricity distributions in observed exoplanets does not automatically produce bright outer rings at large radii in the disk. This means that high resolution observations of disks of various sizes are needed to distinguish between different giant planet formation scenarios during the disk phase, where the giants form either in the outer regions of the disks or in the inner regions. In the second scenario, the disks do not present planet-related features at large radii. Finally, we find that, even when the dust temperature is determined self-consistently, the dust masses derived observationally might be off by up to a factor of ten compared to the dust contained in our simulations due to the creation of optically thick regions. Our study clearly shows that in addition to the constraints from exoplanets and the Solar System, ALMA has the power to constrain different stages of planet formation already during the first few million years, which corresponds to the gas disk phase.</p>
Title: Constraining giant planet formation with synthetic ALMA images of the Solar System's natal protoplanetary disk
Description:
<p>New ALMA observations of protoplanetary disks allow us to probe planet formation in other planetary systems, giving us new constraints on planet formation processes.
Meanwhile, studies of our own Solar System rely on constraints derived in a completely different way.
However, it is still unclear what features the Solar System protoplanetary disk could have produced during its gas phase.
By running 2D isothermal hydro-simulations used as inputs for a dust evolution model, we derive synthetic images at millimeter wavelengths using the radiative transfer code RADMC3D.
We find that the embedded multiple giant planets strongly perturb the radial gas velocities of the disk.
These velocity perturbations create traffic jams in the dust, producing over-densities different from the ones created by pressure traps and located away from the planets&#8217; positions in the disk.
By deriving the images at &#955; = 1.
3 mm from these dust distributions, we show that very high resolution observations are needed to distinguish the most important features expected in the inner part (<15 AU) of the disk.
The traffic jams, observable with a high resolution, further blur the link between the number of gaps and rings in disks and the number of embedded planets.
We additionally show that a system capable of producing eccentric planets by scattering events that match the eccentricity distributions in observed exoplanets does not automatically produce bright outer rings at large radii in the disk.
This means that high resolution observations of disks of various sizes are needed to distinguish between different giant planet formation scenarios during the disk phase, where the giants form either in the outer regions of the disks or in the inner regions.
In the second scenario, the disks do not present planet-related features at large radii.
Finally, we find that, even when the dust temperature is determined self-consistently, the dust masses derived observationally might be off by up to a factor of ten compared to the dust contained in our simulations due to the creation of optically thick regions.
Our study clearly shows that in addition to the constraints from exoplanets and the Solar System, ALMA has the power to constrain different stages of planet formation already during the first few million years, which corresponds to the gas disk phase.
</p>.
Related Results
Planet Formation
Planet Formation
Modern observational techniques are still not powerful enough to directly view planet formation, and so it is necessary to rely on theory. However, observations do give two importa...
Solar Trackers Using Six-Bar Linkages
Solar Trackers Using Six-Bar Linkages
Abstract
A solar panel faces the sun or has the solar ray normal to its face to enhance power reaping. A fixed solar panel can only meet this condition at one moment...
PREVENÇÃO DA TROMBOSE VENOSA PROFUNDA NA GRAVIDEZ PELA ENFERMAGEM NA APS
PREVENÇÃO DA TROMBOSE VENOSA PROFUNDA NA GRAVIDEZ PELA ENFERMAGEM NA APS
PREVENÇÃO DA TROMBOSE VENOSA PROFUNDA NA GRAVIDEZ PELA ENFERMAGEM NA APS
Danilo Hudson Vieira de Souza1
Priscilla Bárbara Campos
Daniel dos Santos Fernandes
RESUMO
A gravidez ...
Dynamics of giant planets in protoplanetary discs
Dynamics of giant planets in protoplanetary discs
New instruments such as the ALMA interferometer and SPHERE on VLT allowed to obtain a large number of high-resolution images of protoplanetary discs. In these images, substructures...
Chondrule Formation by the Jovian Sweeping Secular Resonance
Chondrule Formation by the Jovian Sweeping Secular Resonance
Chondritic meteorites, or chondrites, contain some of the oldest and most primitive solids in our solar system. They record the physical conditions at the early phase of the solar ...
THE GRAVITATIONAL INTERACTION BETWEEN PLANETS ON INCLINED ORBITS AND PROTOPLANETARY DISKS AS THE ORIGIN OF PRIMORDIAL SPIN–ORBIT MISALIGNMENTS
THE GRAVITATIONAL INTERACTION BETWEEN PLANETS ON INCLINED ORBITS AND PROTOPLANETARY DISKS AS THE ORIGIN OF PRIMORDIAL SPIN–ORBIT MISALIGNMENTS
ABSTRACT
Many of the observed spin–orbit alignment properties of exoplanets can be explained in the context of the primordial disk misalignment model, in which an in...
Offshore Giant Fields, 1950-1990
Offshore Giant Fields, 1950-1990
ABSTRACT
OFFSHORE GIANT FIELDS
1950 - 1990
During the past forty years...
Multi-fluid hydrodynamical simulations of circumbinary planet formation via pebble accretion
Multi-fluid hydrodynamical simulations of circumbinary planet formation via pebble accretion
Context. Since the detection of the first known transiting circumbinary planet (CBP), Kepler-16b,by the Kepler mission, a total pf 14 CBPs have been detected, raising questions abo...

