2005A&A...441..791F


Query : 2005A&A...441..791F

2005A&A...441..791F - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 441, 791-806 (2005/10-2)

Oligarchic and giant impact growth of terrestrial planets in the presence of gas giant planet migration.

FOGG M.J. and NELSON R.P.

Abstract (from CDS):

Giant planets found orbiting close to their central stars, the so-called ``hot Jupiters'', are thought to have originally formed in the cooler outer regions of a protoplanetary disk and then to have migrated inward via tidal interactions with the nebula gas. We present the results of N-body simulations which examine the effect such gas giant planet migration has on the formation of terrestrial planets. The models incorporate a 0.5 Jupiter mass planet undergoing type II migration through an inner protoplanet-planetesimal disk, with gas drag included. Each model is initiated with the inner disk being at successively increased levels of maturity, so that it is undergoing either oligarchic or giant impact style growth as the gas giant migrates. In all cases, a large fraction of the disk mass survives the passage of the giant, either by accreting into massive terrestrial planets shepherded inward of the giant, or by being scattered into external orbits. Shepherding is favored in younger disks where there is strong dynamical friction from planetesimals and gas drag is more influential, whereas scattering dominates in more mature disks where dissipation is weaker. In each scenario, sufficient mass is scattered outward to provide for the eventual accretion of a set of terrestrial planets in external orbits, including within the system's habitable zone. This scattering, however, significantly reduces the density of solid material, indicating that further accretion will occur over very long time scales. A particularly interesting result is the generation of massive, short period, terrestrial planets from compacted material pushed ahead of the giant. These planets are reminiscent of the short period Neptune-mass planets discovered recently, suggesting that such ``hot Neptunes'' could form locally as a by-product of giant planet migration.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): planets and satellites: formation - methods: N-body simulations astrobiology -

Simbad objects: 14

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Number of rows : 14
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 * eps Eri BY* 03 32 55.8444911587 -09 27 29.739493865 5.19 4.61 3.73 3.00 2.54 K2V 1932 1
2 * rho01 Cnc e Pl 08 52 35.8111044043 +28 19 50.954994470           ~ 576 1
3 * rho01 Cnc EB* 08 52 35.8111044043 +28 19 50.954994470 7.45 6.82   5.4   K0IV-V 1121 1
4 * rho01 Cnc b Pl 08 52 35.8111044043 +28 19 50.954994470           ~ 259 1
5 Ross 905b Pl 11 42 11.0933350978 +26 42 23.650782778           ~ 811 1
6 Ross 905 PM* 11 42 11.0933350978 +26 42 23.650782778   12.06 10.613 10.272 8.24 M3V 645 1
7 * mu. Ara PM* 17 44 08.7031414872 -51 50 02.591603160   5.85 5.15     G3IV-V 531 2
8 * mu. Ara b Pl 17 44 08.7031414872 -51 50 02.591603160           ~ 92 2
9 * mu. Ara d Pl 17 44 08.7031414872 -51 50 02.591603160           ~ 67 2
10 BD-15 6290d Pl 22 53 16.7325836486 -14 15 49.304052185           ~ 157 1
11 BD-15 6290c Pl 22 53 16.7325836486 -14 15 49.304052185           ~ 195 1
12 BD-15 6290 BY* 22 53 16.7325836486 -14 15 49.304052185 12.928 11.749 10.192 9.013 7.462 M3.5V 1013 1
13 * 51 Peg b Pl 22 57 27.9804852576 +20 46 07.797040104           ~ 666 1
14 * alf PsA PM* 22 57 39.04625 -29 37 20.0533 1.31 1.25 1.16 1.11 1.09 A4V 1236 3

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