Brought to you by:

From Mean Motion Resonances to Scattered Planets: Producing the Solar System, Eccentric Exoplanets, and Late Heavy Bombardments

, , , and

© 2008. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Edward W. Thommes et al 2008 ApJ 675 1538 DOI 10.1086/525244

0004-637X/675/2/1538

Abstract

We show that interaction with a gas disk may produce young planetary systems with closely spaced orbits, stabilized by mean motion resonances between neighbors. On longer timescales, after the gas is gone, interaction with a remnant planetesimal disk tends to pull these configurations apart, eventually inducing dynamical instability. We find that this can lead to a variety of outcomes; some cases resemble the solar system, while others end up with high-eccentricity orbits reminiscent of the observed exoplanets. A similar mechanism has been previously suggested as the cause of the lunar late heavy bombardment. Thus, it may be that a large-scale dynamical instability, with more or less cataclysmic results, is an evolutionary step common to many planetary systems, including our own.

Export citation and abstract BibTeX RIS

Please wait… references are loading.
10.1086/525244