scholarly journals Warm dust around ϵ Eridani

2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S276) ◽  
pp. 455-456
Author(s):  
Martin Reidemeister ◽  
Alexander V. Krivov ◽  
Christopher C. Stark ◽  
Jean-Charles Augereau ◽  
Torsten Löhne ◽  
...  

Abstractϵ Eridani hosts one known inner planet and an outer Kuiper belt analog. Further, Spitzer/IRS measurements indicate that warm dust is present at distances as close as a few AU from the star. Its origin is puzzling, since an “asteroid belt” that could produce this dust would be unstable because of the inner planet. We tested a hypothesis that the observed warm dust is generated by collisions in the outer belt and is transported inward by P-R drag and strong stellar winds. With numerical simulation we investigated how the dust streams from the outer ring into the inner system, and calculated the thermal emission of the dust. We show that the observed warm dust can indeed stem from the outer belt. Our models reproduce the shape and magnitude of the observed SED from mid-IR to sub-mm wavelengths, as well as the Spitzer/MIPS radial brightness profiles.

Author(s):  
Azka Umar ◽  
Chun Jiang

This paper focuses on manipulating thermal emission and radiation loss of heat energy in a heat waveguide. A One-Dimensional Photonic Crystal is used as a waveguide clad to prohibit the thermal emission from escaping. The model may reduce the radiation loss of heat energy in the waveguide core, and heat energy can be confined to propagate along the waveguide’s longitude axis. The waveguide clad comprises alternative layers of high and low refractive index materials containing sufficient electromagnetic stop bands to trap the thermal emission from escaping out of the waveguide. The numerical simulation of the model shows that the forbidden bandgap of photonic crystal structures with alternative layers of silica and silicon has width enough to make heat energy be confined within the waveguide core so that efficient heat energy transmission can be achieved along the longitude axis of the waveguide.


2020 ◽  
Vol 633 ◽  
pp. A117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wladimir Neumann ◽  
Ralf Jaumann ◽  
Julie Castillo-Rogez ◽  
Carol A. Raymond ◽  
Christopher T. Russell

Aims. We model thermal evolution and water-rock differentiation of small ice-rock objects that accreted at different heliocentric distances, while also considering migration into the asteroid belt for Ceres. We investigate how water-rock separation and various cooling processes influence Ceres’ structure and its thermal conditions at present. We also draw conclusions about the presence of liquids and the possibility of cryovolcanism. Methods. We calculated energy balance in bodies heated by radioactive decay and compaction-driven water-rock separation in a three-component dust-water/ice-empty pores mixture, while also taking into consideration second-order processes, such as accretional heating, hydrothermal circulation, and ocean or ice convection. Calculations were performed for varying accretion duration, final size, surface temperature, and dust/ice ratio to survey the range of possible internal states for precursors of Ceres. Subsequently, the evolution of Ceres was considered in five sets of simulated models, covering different accretion and evolution orbits and dust/ice ratios. Results. We find that Ceres’ precursors in the inner solar system could have been both wet and dry, while in the Kuiper belt, they retain the bulk of their water content. For plausible accretion scenarios, a thick primordial crust may be retained over several Gyr, following a slow differentiation within a few hundreds of Myr, assuming an absence of destabilizing impacts. The resulting thermal conditions at present allow for various salt solutions at depths of ≲10 km. The warmest present subsurface is obtained for an accretion in the Kuiper belt and migration to the present orbit. Conclusions. Our results indicate that Ceres’ material could have been aqueously altered on small precursors. The modeled structure of Ceres suggests that a liquid layer could still be present between the crust and the core, which is consistent with Dawn observations and, thus, suggests accretion in the Kuiper belt. While the crust stability calculations indicate crust retention, the convection analysis and interior evolution imply that the crust could still be evolving.


2020 ◽  
Vol 500 (1) ◽  
pp. 718-735
Author(s):  
Alexander V Krivov ◽  
Mark C Wyatt

ABSTRACT Debris belts on the periphery of planetary systems, encompassing the region occupied by planetary orbits, are massive analogues of the Solar system’s Kuiper belt. They are detected by thermal emission of dust released in collisions amongst directly unobservable larger bodies that carry most of the debris disc mass. We estimate the total mass of the discs by extrapolating up the mass of emitting dust with the help of collisional cascade models. The resulting mass of bright debris discs appears to be unrealistically large, exceeding the mass of solids available in the systems at the preceding protoplanetary stage. We discuss this ‘mass problem’ in detail and investigate possible solutions to it. These include uncertainties in the dust opacity and planetesimal strength, variation of the bulk density with size, steepening of the size distribution by damping processes, the role of the unknown ‘collisional age’ of the discs, and dust production in recent giant impacts. While we cannot rule out the possibility that a combination of these might help, we argue that the easiest solution would be to assume that planetesimals in systems with bright debris discs were ‘born small’, with sizes in the kilometre range, especially at large distances from the stars. This conclusion would necessitate revisions to the existing planetesimal formation models, and may have a range of implications for planet formation. We also discuss potential tests to constrain the largest planetesimal sizes and debris disc masses.


1992 ◽  
Vol 152 ◽  
pp. 123-132
Author(s):  
Ch Froeschle ◽  
P. Farinella ◽  
C. Froeschle ◽  
Z. Knežević ◽  
A. Milani

Generalizing the secular perturbation theory of Milani and Knežević (1990), we have determined in the a — e — I proper elements space the locations of the secular resonances between the precession rates of the longitudes of perihelion and node of a small body and the corresponding eigenfrequencies of the secular perturbations of the four outer planets. We discuss some implications of the results for the dynamical evolution of small solar system bodies. In particular, our findings include: (i) the fact that the g = g6 resonance in the inner asteroid belt lies closer than previously assumed to the Flora region, providing a plausible dynamical route to inject asteroid fragments into planet-crossing orbits; (ii) the possible presence of some low-inclination “stable islands” between the orbits of the outer planets; (iii) the fact that none of the secular resonances considered in this work exists for semimajor axes > 50 AU, so that these resonances do not provide a mechanism for transporting inwards possible Kuiper–belt comets.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (S318) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hubert Klahr ◽  
Andreas Schreiber

AbstractThe asteroids (more precisely: objects of the main asteroid belt) and Kuiper Belt objects (more precisely: objects of the cold classical Kuiper Belt) are leftovers of the building material for our earth and all other planets in our solar system from more than 4.5 billion years ago. At the time of their formation those were typically 100 km large objects. They were called planetesimals, built up from icy and dusty grains. In our current paradigm of planet formation it was turbulent flows and metastable flow patterns, like zonal flows and vortices, that concentrated mm to cm sized icy dust grains in sufficient numbers that a streaming instability followed by a gravitational collapse of these particle clump was triggered. The entire picture is sometimes referred to as gravoturbulent formation of planetesimals. What was missing until recently, was a physically motivated prediction on the typical sizes at which planetesimals should form via this process. Our numerical simulations in the past had only shown a correlation between numerical resolution and planetesimal size and thus no answer was possible (Johansen et al.2011). But with the lastest series of simulations on JUQUEEN (Stephan & Doctor 2015), covering all the length scales down to the physical size of actual planetesimals, we were able to obtain values for the turbulent particle diffusion as a function of the particle load in the gas. Thus, we have all necessary data at hand to feed a 'back of the envelope' calculation that predicts the size of planetesimals as result of a competition between gravitational concentration and turbulent diffusion. Using the diffusion values obtained in the numerical simulations it predicts planetesimal sizes on the order of 100 km, which suprisingly coincides with the measured data from both asteroids (Bottke et al.2005) as well from Kuiper Belt objects (Nesvorny et al.2011).


1999 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 17-30
Author(s):  
T.V. Ruzmaikina

AbstractTerrestrial planets, cores of giant planets and small bodies of the solar system − comets and asteroids − resulted from the coagulation of interstellar dust grains, and grains which were melted or evaporated and condensed again in the solar nebula.The paper describes the growth and processing of dust grains and their aggregates, starting from molecular cloud cores through the formation and evolution of the solar nebula and the accumulation of these aggregates in larger solid bodies − planetesimals. Discussed are the processes which could be responsible for the interruption of accumulation in the region of the asteroid belt, and processes which shaped the Kuiper belt.


Author(s):  
John Chambers ◽  
Jacqueline Mitton

This chapter illustrates how the solar system has a decidedly two-dimensional aspect to it. The orbits of the eight major planets all lie in almost the same plane, deviating by no more than seven degrees. Bodies in the asteroid belt and the Kuiper belt stray a little further afield, but these belts are arranged like flattened donuts, aligned with the same plane as the planets. Immanuel Kant and Pierre-Simon de Laplace noted the planar nature of the solar system and used this as the basis for their nebular theories in which the solar system grew out of a flattened disk of matter. Young stars like those in the constellation Orion are often surrounded by disk-shaped clouds of gas and dust. Astronomers quickly dubbed these “protoplanetary” disks, assuming that they will someday form planetary systems.


1988 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 309-324
Author(s):  
R.D. Blandford

AbstractSome recent developments in the theory of particle acceleration at supernova shock fronts are reviewed and the confrontation of this theory with measurements of galactic cosmic rays and observations of supernova remnants is discussed. Supernova shock waves are able to account for the energetics, spectrum and composition of galactic cosmic rays, though it remains difficult to understand acceleration of ∼ 105 GeV particles. Recent developments in the analysis of interplanetary shock waves and in the numerical simulation of quasi-parallel shocks are encouraging. Interpretations of different categories of remnants are reviewed and a speculative interpretation of the optical companion to SN1987a is discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 886 ◽  
pp. 422-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhu Lin Wang ◽  
Fan Sheng Kong ◽  
Hai Ping Li

Cylindrical launcher is widely used on the battlefield. Characteristic is easy handling, facilitate multigang outfit, cluster launch, emission rate and better generalization and standardization, etc. This paper mainly studies the thermal emission process of a cylindrical launch, the unsteady numerical simulation of the process, using computational fluid dynamics software GAMBIT and FLUENT, and the concept of dynamic grid and updating method of a certain type of cylindrical equipment vertical thermal emission process. Through to the launcher unsteady numerical simulation of the flow field of the guide surface pressure distribution contours, which lay a foundation for the study of the structure of this type of equipment. At the same time it is for the equipment launcher applicability related research to provide the reference.


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