Title: Forming Planets: when and how
1Forming Planets when and how
Nuria Calvet Department of Astronomy University
of Michigan
To Sra. Magris
2Our Planetary System
Sun
Pluto and Kuiper Belt bodies
Rocky Planets
Giant Planets
3Extrasolar planets
340 and counting (NYT 03/03/09)
420 1 known multi-planetary systems
Large diversity
How do they form? Why so diverse?
5Other planetary systems
Common properties Star at center Planets and
other bodies in disk rotating around the star
6Solar System in the Galaxy
Solar System
Our twin galaxy
7Star-forming regions in the plane of the Galaxy
Most star formation along spiral arms of
galaxy Spiral arms regions of high density of
gas and dust
Infrared
Optical
Dust is cold and emits infrared radiation
Dust traces arms and star-forming regions
8Electromagnetic radiation
10-7 10-5 5x10-5
10-3 1 100
cm
X rays Ultraviolet Visual
Infrared Microwaves Radio
Rainbow colors
9Blackbody emission
UV V IR
A blackbody emits all the energy it absorbs The
temperature of a blackbody decreases as it
absorbs less energy A blackbody emits at longer
wavelength the cooler it gets Interstellar dust
is heated by absorbing radiation from distant
stars Cold, 10 279F Bright in the infrared
10The Three Great Observatories
Star Forming Regions
11Molecular clouds
Molecular cloud
Spiral arm
Molecular cloud core
12Molecular clouds and cores
Hubble image
13The Orion Nebula
The closest massive star forming region
14What is in the disk?
15The youngest objects
Hidden inside molecular clouds
infrared
visual
Barnard dark cloud
16Dust shines in Spitzer images
Infrared
Optical
17Multi-wavelength view of Young cluster
Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech
18Multi-wavelength view of Star-forming region
Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech
19Molecular cloud cores collapse
Core collapses under its own gravity. Too cold to
build enough pressure to counteract
gravity Collapse conserving angular momentum A
disk is formed around central object
?1
0.1 pc 20,000 AU
100 AU
1 AU distance earth-sun 1.5 x 108 km 9 x
107 Miles
20Disk formation
- Collisions between opposing flows make the disk.
21Protostars images of (rotating) infall forming
rotating disks
22Disks in silhouettes and photoevaporating in
Orion Nebula cluster
23Disks and associated jets
HH 30
Credits Alan Watson (Universidad Nacional
Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico), Karl Stapelfeldt
(NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory), John Krist
(STScI), and Chris Burrows (ESA/STScI)
24A new edge-on disk around a low mass star
200 AU
Discovered 2 weeks ago by Kevin Luhman,
collaborator at Penn State
25Spectral energy distribution Spitzer data
Disk heated by the star Temperature decreases
with distance to the star Each disk ring emits at
longer wavelength
26What are these disks?
Gas with 1 of dust particles, circling around
the star Mass 1-5 mass of star, 10-50
Jupiter masses Rotational velocity is Keplerian,
increases as distance to star decreases
Disks are changing with time Mass is accreted
onto the star Dust particles collide with each
other, grow, settle towards the midplane of the
disk
Disks evolve
27Disks are accreting matter onto the star
Differential rotation causes rubbing between the
rings of the disk Rubbing transfers angular
momentum outwards - Inner rings tend to rotate
slower, outer rings faster Inner rings move
inward, outer rings outwards Matter spirals in
and finally is accreted onto the star Disk
expands to conserve angular momentum
faster
slower
28Dust particles collide and stick together
Starting with sizes 1 micron Collide with each
other, stick together, grow
1 micron 0.0001 cm
29Dust settles toward the midplane of the disk
Dust starts small and is well mixed with
gas Particles stick together and grow Larger
particles sink toward miplane Particle collisions
and growth continues at midplane Planetesimals (
m - km size) are formed
30What materials?
Depends on temperature Metals, rocks can survive
to high temperature Ices only below 150K
31Composition of particles in disk
Disk is heated by central star Only rocky
planetesimals in inner disk, ices also beyond
snow line
Snow line
32Our Planetary System
Sun
Snow line
Pluto and Kuiper Belt bodies
Rocky Planets
Giant Planets
33Accretion model for forming giant planets
Jupiter
Timescales 10 million years
H, He rich envelope
Planetesimal core
34Building giant planets
- Each giant planet formed its own miniature disk
- The biggest moons formed out of this disk.
35Disk with multiple giant planets
36When do giant planets form?
Giant planets need gas to form But disk gas is
accreting onto the star Eventually disk runs out
of gas How long does the gas last in the disk?
37When do giant planets form?
Find the disks in stellar groups of different
ages Disks detected by emission in Spitzer
bands Gas in disk is gone by 10 million years!
Giant planets form during the first 10 million
years of the life of the star
Study by Jesus Hernandez postdoc at Michigan
38Opening a gap
Planets as they grow drive density waves into the
disks nearby These waves carry angular momentum
and can push gas away from planet opening a gap
Simulations Frederik Masset
39Planet-disk interaction migration
When planet mass is low, disk pushes it
inward Planet may fall into star!
Hydrodynamical simulations by Frederic Masset
40Planet-disk interaction stopping migration and
opening gap
When/if planet accretes enough mass, migration
stops Planet opens a gap in disk
Frederic Masset
41Disk Evolution
Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech
42What do we observe? Inner disk clearing
Full disk
Hot inner regions gone
IRS disk team
43Signature of gaps
Inner clearing
Inner clearing
Less emission at intermediate wavelengths
44Clear evidence of gaps!
full disk
Disk with gap
star
Catherine Espaillat et al 2007, 2008 Michigan
graduate student
45Evolutionary sequence the first stages of giant
planet formation
Disk Gaps
Full disk
Inner Disk Holes
Spitzer Science Center
46Formation of terrestrial planets
After gas in essentially gone - and danger of
migrating into star is over! Collisions between
left-behind planetesimals can build up
terrestrial planets
47Diversity?
Because of chaotic/random motions, different sets
of planets result from slightly different initial
conditions
Chambers Wetherill 1998
48Diversity
Range of initial conditions and disk properties
can explain large diversity of exoplanets!
observations
models
Research by Althea Moorhead and Fred Adams,
Michigan Physics
49Formation of the planets quick summary
- cold gas core collapses under gravity to form
protostar with disk and jet. accretes mass from
disk
planets form in dusty rotating disk
dust and gas gets swallowed up (accreted) in
larger bodies
50Scientific American Top 10 Exoplanets
at Michigan
51Proto-Jupiter Flyby
52 53 54IAU 2006 General Assembly definition of Planet
- The International Astronomical Union members
gathered at the 2006 General Assembly agreed that
a planet is defined as a celestial body that - Is in orbit around the Sun
- Has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to
overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a
hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape, and - Has cleared the neighborhood around its orbit
55IAU 2006 General Assembly definition of Planet
Eris
56The outer Solar System
Dwarf Planets and Small Solar-System Bodies
57Alternative theory formation by gravitational
instabilities
Region of high density in disk collapse under its
own gravity, forming a giant planet
58Planets detected by transit
59Planet detection by Doppler shift
60Scientific American Top 10 Exoplanets
61Scientific American Top 10 Exoplanets
62Scientific American Top 10 Exoplanets
63Scientific American Top 10 Exoplanets
64Scientific American Top 10 Exoplanets
65A planet in a debris disk
66Planet-interactions gap opening
Frederic Masset
67What is in the disk?
68Pre-Transitional Disk of LkCa 15
- Truncated outer disk at 46 AU (Pietu et al. 2006)
- Binary? No companion M 0.1 Msun 3-22 AU
(Ireland Krauss 2008) or larger separations
(White Ghez 2001)
69Pre-Transitional Disk of LkCa 15
Increasing flux/ optically thick disk
70Detailed near-IR spectrum of pre-transitional
disk LkCa 15
Blackbody at T 1500K
Espaillat et al. 2008, Poster by Espaillat 91
2-5 mm SpeX spectrum
71Blackbody-like near-IR excess between 2-5 mm in
full disks of CTTS
Muzerolle et al. 2003
72Dust-gas Transition
Monnier Millan-Gabet 2002
73Detailed near-IR spectra of transitional disks
No hot optically thick gas!
Poster by Espaillat 91