Insights into Planet Formation from Debris Disks: I. The Solar System as an Archetype for Planetesimal Evolution

被引:0
|
作者
Brenda C. Matthews
JJ Kavelaars
机构
[1] National Research Council of Canada,
[2] University of Victoria,undefined
来源
Space Science Reviews | 2016年 / 205卷
关键词
Circumstellar disks; Planet formation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Circumstellar disks have long been regarded as windows into planetary systems. The advent of high sensitivity, high resolution imaging in the submillimeter where both the solid and gas components of disks can be detected opens up new possibilities for understanding the dynamical histories of these systems and therefore, a better ability to place our own solar system, which hosts a highly evolved debris disk, in context. Comparisons of dust masses from protoplanetary and debris disks have revealed a stark downturn in mass in millimeter-sized grains around a stellar age of 10 Myr, ostensibly in the “transition disk” phase, suggesting a period of rapid accretion of such grains onto planetesimals. This rapid formation phase is in keeping with radionucleide studies of Kuiper Belt Objects in the solar system. Importantly, this suggests that any thermal gradients in the gas of disks of this era will be “frozen in” to the planetesimals as they rapidly accrete from the solids and ices in their vicinity. Measurements of radial gradients in thermal tracers such as DHO, DCN and other tracers can therefore provide insight into the nascent solar system’s abundances. In studies of dynamical evolution of the solar system, it is tacitly assumed that such abundances can reveal the location of formation for bodies now found in the asteroid belt and Kuiper belt. Similarly, evidence of gas detected from collisional evolution in young debris disks could potentially reveal how rapidly objects have dynamically evolved in those systems, most of which will be significantly younger than the solar system.
引用
收藏
页码:213 / 230
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Long-term Protoplanetary Disk Evolution from Molecular Cloud Core Collapse and Implications for Planet Formation. I. Weak and Moderate Disk Self-gravities
    Wang, Xin-Ming
    [J]. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2023, 944 (01):
  • [42] The solar chromosphere at high resolution with IBIS -: I.: New insights from the Ca II 854.2 nm line
    Cauzzi, G.
    Reardon, K. P.
    Uitenbroek, H.
    Cavallini, F.
    Falchi, A.
    Falciani, R.
    Janssen, K.
    Rimmele, T.
    Vecchio, A.
    Woeger, F.
    [J]. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2008, 480 (02) : 515 - 526
  • [43] Numerical Simulations of Multiphase Winds and Fountains from Star-forming Galactic Disks. I. Solar Neighborhood TIGRESS Model
    Kim, Chang-Goo
    Ostriker, Eve C.
    [J]. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2018, 853 (02):
  • [44] Architecture and evolution of the Finale channel system, the Numidian Flysch Formation of Sicily; insights from a hierarchical approach
    Thomas, M. F. H.
    Bodin, S.
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2013, 41 : 163 - 185
  • [45] The First Habitable-zone Earth-sized Planet from TESS. I. Validation of the TOI-700 System
    Gilbert, Emily A.
    Barclay, Thomas
    Schlieder, Joshua E.
    Quintana, Elisa, V
    Hord, Benjamin J.
    Kostov, Veselin B.
    Lopez, Eric D.
    Rowe, Jason F.
    Hoffman, Kelsey
    Walkowicz, Lucianne M.
    Silverstein, Michele L.
    Rodriguez, Joseph E.
    Vanderburg, Andrew
    Suissa, Gabrielle
    Airapetian, Vladimir S.
    Clement, Matthew S.
    Raymond, Sean N.
    Mann, Andrew W.
    Kruse, Ethan
    Lissauer, Jack J.
    Colon, Knicole D.
    Kopparapu, Ravi Kumar
    Kreidberg, Laura
    Zieba, Sebastian
    Collins, Karen A.
    Quinn, Samuel N.
    Howell, Steve B.
    Ziegler, Carl
    Vrijmoet, Eliot Halley
    Adams, Fred C.
    Arney, Giada N.
    Boyd, Patricia T.
    Brande, Jonathan
    Burke, Christopher J.
    Cacciapuoti, Luca
    Chance, Quadry
    Christiansen, Jessie L.
    Covone, Giovanni
    Daylan, Tansu
    Dineen, Danielle
    Dressing, Courtney D.
    Essack, Zahra
    Fauchez, Thomas J.
    Galgano, Brianna
    Howe, Alex R.
    Kaltenegger, Lisa
    Kane, Stephen R.
    Lam, Christopher
    Lee, Eve J.
    Lewis, Nikole K.
    [J]. ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 2020, 160 (03):
  • [46] Velocity Response of the Observed Explosive Events in the Lower Solar Atmosphere. I. Formation of the Flowing Cool-loop System
    Srivastava, A. K.
    Rao, Yamini K.
    Konkol, P.
    Murawski, K.
    Mathioudakis, M.
    Tiwari, Sanjiv K.
    Scullion, E.
    Doyle, J. G.
    Dwivedi, B. N.
    [J]. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2020, 894 (02):
  • [47] Stars with Photometrically Young Gaia Luminosities Around the Solar System (SPYGLASS). I. Mapping Young Stellar Structures and Their Star Formation Histories
    Kerr, Ronan M. P.
    Rizzuto, Aaron C.
    Kraus, Adam L.
    Offner, Stella S. R.
    [J]. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2021, 917 (01):
  • [48] Formation and evolution of a magmatic system in the Indian passive margin: Insights from the Triassic Yumai Complex from the eastern Tethyan Himalaya
    Wang, Chao
    Ding, Lin
    Wang, Houqi
    Cai, Fulong
    Wang, Xiaodong
    Zhang, Liyun
    Yue, Yahui
    [J]. GEOSPHERE, 2023, 19 (06): : 1709 - 1728
  • [49] Extinct 129I in halite from a primitive meteorite:: Evidence for evaporite formation in the early solar system
    Whitby, J
    Burgess, R
    Turner, G
    Gilmour, J
    Bridges, J
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2000, 288 (5472) : 1819 - 1821
  • [50] An operational system to estimate global solar exposure over the Australian region from satellite observations - I. Method and the initial climatology
    Weymouth, G
    Le Marshall, J
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN METEOROLOGICAL MAGAZINE, 1999, 48 (03): : 181 - 195