City
Epaper

Early planetary migration can explain missing planets: Study

By ANI | Updated: November 8, 2022 10:15 IST

Computer simulations by Rice University scientists and their collaborators are the first to integrate a model of planet formation ...

Open in App

Computer simulations by Rice University scientists and their collaborators are the first to integrate a model of planet formation and evolution that explains two puzzling observations of exoplanets orbiting distant stars: the rarity of worlds about 1.8 times larger than Earth and the near-identical size of adjacent planets in hundreds of planetary systems.

One puzzle known as the "radius valley" refers to the rarity of exoplanets with a radius about 1.8 times that of Earth. NASA's Kepler spacecraft observed planets of this size about 2-3 times less frequently than it observed super-Earths with radii about 1.4 times that of Earth and mini-Neptunes with radii about 2.5 times Earth's. The second mystery, known as "peas in a pod," refers to neighboring planets of similar size that have been found in hundreds of planetary systems. Those include TRAPPIST-1 and Kepler-223, which also feature planetary orbits of near-musical harmony.

"I believe we are the first to explain the radius valley using a model of planet formation and dynamical evolution that self-consistently accounts for multiple constraints of observations," said Rice University's Andre Izidoro, corresponding author of a study published this week in Astrophysical Journal Letters. "We're also able to show that a planet-formation model incorporating giant impacts is consistent with the peas-in-a-pod feature of exoplanets."

Izidoro, a Welch Postdoctoral Fellow at Rice's NASA-fundedCLEVER Planets project, and co-authors used a supercomputer to simulate the first 50 million years of the development of planetary systems using a planetary migration model. In the model, protoplanetary disks of gas and dust that give rise to young planets also interact with them, pulling them closer to their parent stars and locking them in resonant orbital chains. The chains are broken within a few million years, when the disappearance of the protoplanetary disk causes orbital instabilities that lead two or more planets to slam into one another.

Planetary migration models have been used to study planetary systems that have retained their resonant orbital chains. For example, Izidoro and CLEVER Planets colleagues used a migration model in 2021 to calculate the maximum amount of disruption TRAPPIST-1's seven-planet system could have withstood during bombardment and still retained its harmonious orbital structure.

In the new study, Izidoro partnered with CLEVER Planets' investigators Rajdeep Dasgupta and Andrea Isella, both of Rice, Hilke Schlichting of the University of California, Los Angeles, and Christian Zimmermann and Bertram Bitsch of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany.

"The migration of young planets towards their host stars creates overcrowding and frequently results in cataclysmic collisions that strip planets of their hydrogen-rich atmospheres," Izidoro said. "That means giant impacts, like the one that formed our moon, are probably a generic outcome of planet formation."

The research suggests planets come in two "flavors," super-Earths that are dry, rocky and 50% larger than Earth, and mini-Neptunes that are rich in water ice and about 2.5 times larger than Earth. Izidoro said new observations seem to support the results, which conflict with the traditional view that both super-Earths and mini-Neptunes are exclusively dry and rocky worlds.

Based on their findings, the researchers made predictions that can be tested by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. They suggest, for instance, that a fraction of planets about twice Earth's size will both retain their primordial hydrogen-rich atmosphere and be rich in water.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Rajdeep DasguptaAndrea isellaGermanyLos AngelesNasaRice UniversityL.a.National programmeBorish johnsonLos angeles dream centerSpace agencyNational space agency
Open in App

Related Stories

HealthDr. Nitish Dubey’s Burnett Homeopathy Hosts Historic World Homeopathy Summit 3 During World Homeopathy Week in Germany

InternationalCalifornia: Stolen Truck Crashes Into Multiple Vehicles in Long Beach During Dramatic LAPD Pursuit; Video Goes Viral

NationalSunita Williams Return: IIT Bombay Professor Says, “This Tells Us About Complexities of Space” (Watch Video)

InternationalDolphins Greet NASA Astronauts Off Florida Coast as They Return Home After Extended Space Mission

InternationalSunita Williams Returns to Earth: What Did NASA Astronaut Do in Space for Nine Months?

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyStudy links antibiotic exposure before age two to childhood obesity

TechnologyBoult Audio’s net profit declines by 37 pc in FY24, revenue up 41 pc

TechnologyDr Kasturirangan: A legacy spanning decades that left an indelible mark on space science, education in India

TechnologyStudy decodes how malaria can lead to childhood cancer

TechnologyISRO, SCTIMST sign MoU to collaborate on Space Medicine