Capture of comets during the evolution of a star cluster and the origin of the Oort Cloud

1990 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 265-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jia-Qing Zheng ◽  
Mauri J. Valtonen ◽  
Leena Valtaoja
Keyword(s):  
Icarus ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 217 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Brasser ◽  
M.J. Duncan ◽  
H.F. Levison ◽  
M.E. Schwamb ◽  
M.E. Brown
Keyword(s):  

2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S263) ◽  
pp. 67-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodney S. Gomes ◽  
Jean S. Soares

AbstractWe review two main scenarios that may have implanted Sedna, 2004 VN112 and 2000 CR105 on their current peculiar orbits. These scenarios are based on perihelion lifting mechanisms that acted upon primordial scattered icy bodies. Supposing that the Sun was formed in a dense star cluster and that the gas giants were also forming while the cluster was still dense, an inner Oort cloud that includes Sedna at its inner edge could have been formed by the circularization of icy leftovers orbits scattered by the gas giants. A putative planetary mass solar companion can also produce a similar population of icy bodies through a perihelion lifting mechanism induced by secular resonances from the companion. A third scenario also dependent on a primordial dense cluster may contribute to adding a significant number of extrasolar icy bodies to the main solar component of the population created by the cluster model. These extrasolar objects are transferred to Sun orbits from the scattered disk of passing stars that were numerous in the dense primordial environment. We compare the scenarios as to the orbital distribution of the induced populations as well as their total mass. We conclude that both the cluster model and the solar companion model can produce icy body populations consistent with Sedna's orbit. It is also quite possible that this inner Oort cloud may be composed of roughly one tenth of extrasolar objects.


1999 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 45-50
Author(s):  
L. Neslušan

AbstractComets are created in the cool, dense regions of interstellar clouds. These macroscopic bodies take place in the collapse of protostar cloud as mechanically moving bodies in contrast to the gas and miscroscopic dust holding the laws of hydrodynamics. In the presented contribution, there is given an evidence concerning the Solar system comets: if the velocity distribution of comets before the collapse was similar to that in the Oort cloud at the present, then the comets remained at large cloud-centric distances. Hence, the comets in the solar Oort cloud represent a relict of the nebular stage of the Solar system.


1999 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 327-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.A. Fernández ◽  
T. Gallardo

AbstractThe Oort cloud probably is the source of Halley-type (HT) comets and perhaps of some Jupiter-family (JF) comets. The process of capture of Oort cloud comets into HT comets by planetary perturbations and its efficiency are very important problems in comet ary dynamics. A small fraction of comets coming from the Oort cloud − of about 10−2− are found to become HT comets (orbital periods < 200 yr). The steady-state population of HT comets is a complex function of the influx rate of new comets, the probability of capture and their physical lifetimes. From the discovery rate of active HT comets, their total population can be estimated to be of a few hundreds for perihelion distancesq <2 AU. Randomly-oriented LP comets captured into short-period orbits (orbital periods < 20 yr) show dynamical properties that do not match the observed properties of JF comets, in particular the distribution of their orbital inclinations, so Oort cloud comets can be ruled out as a suitable source for most JF comets. The scope of this presentation is to review the capture process of new comets into HT and short-period orbits, including the possibility that some of them may become sungrazers during their dynamical evolution.


2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie Sticker-Jantscheff

Among the most interesting features of the provincial Roman veteran colony of Augusta Raurica (present-day Switzerland) are its sanctuaries, which were constructed during a period of profound cultural transformation. The current study examines the temples within their surrounding landscape and skyscape, to explore the possibility that their locations and orientations may bear testimony to the cosmological beliefs of the colony's inhabitants. The findings suggest that alignments with the star cluster of the Pleiades and the constellation Orion constituted a connective element between earth and sky and were used by the Gallo-Roman elites to reconcile agricultural work and seasonal festivities with new socio-political and religious requirements.


1999 ◽  
Vol 117 (2) ◽  
pp. 1042-1055 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan García-Sánchez ◽  
Robert A. Preston ◽  
Dayton L. Jones ◽  
Paul R. Weissman ◽  
Jean-François Lestrade ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 502 (4) ◽  
pp. 5185-5199
Author(s):  
Hamidreza Mahani ◽  
Akram Hasani Zonoozi ◽  
Hosein Haghi ◽  
Tereza Jeřábková ◽  
Pavel Kroupa ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Some ultracompact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) have elevated observed dynamical V-band mass-to-light (M/LV) ratios with respect to what is expected from their stellar populations assuming a canonical initial mass function (IMF). Observations have also revealed the presence of a compact dark object in the centres of several UCDs, having a mass of a few to 15 per cent of the present-day stellar mass of the UCD. This central mass concentration has typically been interpreted as a supermassive black hole, but can in principle also be a subcluster of stellar remnants. We explore the following two formation scenarios of UCDs: (i) monolithic collapse and (ii) mergers of star clusters in cluster complexes as are observed in massively starbursting regions. We explore the physical properties of the UCDs at different evolutionary stages assuming different initial stellar masses of the UCDs and the IMF being either universal or changing systematically with metallicity and density according to the integrated Galactic IMF theory. While the observed elevated M/LV ratios of the UCDs cannot be reproduced if the IMF is invariant and universal, the empirically derived IMF that varies systematically with density and metallicity shows agreement with the observations. Incorporating the UCD-mass-dependent retention fraction of dark remnants improves this agreement. In addition, we apply the results of N-body simulations to young UCDs and show that the same initial conditions describing the observed M/LV ratios reproduce the observed relation between the half-mass radii and the present-day masses of the UCDs. The findings thus suggest that the majority of UCDs that have elevated M/LV ratios could have formed monolithically with significant remnant-mass components that are centrally concentrated, while those with small M/LV values may be merged star cluster complexes.


Author(s):  
Benjamin L. Davis ◽  
Alister W. Graham

Abstract Recent X-ray observations by Jiang et al. have identified an active galactic nucleus (AGN) in the bulgeless spiral galaxy NGC 3319, located just $14.3\pm 1.1$ Mpc away, and suggest the presence of an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH; $10^2\leq M_\bullet/\textrm{M}_{\odot}\leq 10^5$ ) if the Eddington ratios are as high as 3 to $3\times10^{-3}$ . In an effort to refine the black hole mass for this (currently) rare class of object, we have explored multiple black hole mass scaling relations, such as those involving the (not previously used) velocity dispersion, logarithmic spiral arm pitch angle, total galaxy stellar mass, nuclear star cluster mass, rotational velocity, and colour of NGC 3319, to obtain 10 mass estimates, of differing accuracy. We have calculated a mass of $3.14_{-2.20}^{+7.02}\times10^4\,\textrm{M}_\odot$ , with a confidence of 84% that it is $\leq $ $10^5\,\textrm{M}_\odot$ , based on the combined probability density function from seven of these individual estimates. Our conservative approach excluded two black hole mass estimates (via the nuclear star cluster mass and the fundamental plane of black hole activity—which only applies to black holes with low accretion rates) that were upper limits of ${\sim}10^5\,{\textrm M}_{\odot}$ , and it did not use the $M_\bullet$ – $L_{\textrm 2-10\,\textrm{keV}}$ relation’s prediction of $\sim$ $10^5\,{\textrm M}_{\odot}$ . This target provides an exceptional opportunity to study an IMBH in AGN mode and advance our demographic knowledge of black holes. Furthermore, we introduce our novel method of meta-analysis as a beneficial technique for identifying new IMBH candidates by quantifying the probability that a galaxy possesses an IMBH.


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