Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

ABUNDANT CIRCUMSTELLAR SILICA DUST AND SiO GAS CREATED BY A GIANT HYPERVELOCITY COLLISION IN THE ~12 MYR HD172555 SYSTEM

FREE ISSUE

C. M. Lisse1,8, C. H. Chen2, M. C. Wyatt3, A. Morlok4,9, I. Song5, G. Bryden6 and P. Sheehan7

Show affiliations


The fine dust detected by infrared (IR) emission around the nearby β Pic analog star HD172555 is very peculiar. The dust mineralogy is composed primarily of highly refractory, nonequilibrium materials, with approximately three quarters of the Si atoms in silica (SiO2) species. Tektite and obsidian lab thermal emission spectra (nonequilibrium glassy silicas found in impact and magmatic systems) are required to fit the data. The best-fit model size distribution for the observed fine dust is dn/da = a –3.95±0.10. While IR photometry of the system has stayed stable since the 1983 IRAS mission, this steep a size distribution, with abundant micron-sized particles, argues for a fresh source of material within the last 0.1 Myr. The location of the dust with respect to the star is at 5.8 ± 0.6 AU (equivalent to 1.9 ± 0.2 AU from the Sun), within the terrestrial planet formation region but at the outer edge of any possible terrestrial habitability zone. The mass of fine dust is 4 × 1019-2 × 1020 kg, equivalent to a 150-200 km radius asteroid. Significant emission features centered at 4 and 8 μm due to fluorescing SiO gas are also found. Roughly 1022 kg of SiO gas, formed by vaporizing silicate rock, is also present in the system, and a separate population of very large, cool grains, massing 1021-1022 kg and equivalent to the largest sized asteroid currently found in the solar system's main asteroid belt, dominates the solid circumstellar material by mass. The makeup of the observed dust and gas, and the noted lack of a dense circumstellar gas disk, strong stellar X-ray activity, and an extended disk of β meteoroids argues that the source of the observed circumstellar materials is a giant hypervelocity (>10 km s–1) impact between large rocky planetesimals, similar to the ones which formed the Moon and which stripped the surface crustal material off of Mercury's surface.


Keywords

astrochemistry; infrared: stars; planetary systems: formation; planetary systems: protoplanetary disks; radiation mechanisms: thermal; techniques: spectroscopic


Dates

Issue 2 (2009 August 20)

Received 2008 November 24, accepted for publication 2009 June 16

Published 2009 August 7



  1. Abundant Circumstellar Silica Dust and SiO Gas Created by a Giant Hypervelocity Collision in the ~12 Myr HD172555 System

    C. M. Lisse et al. 2009 ApJ 701 2019

  2. Time Dilation in Type Ia Supernova Spectra at High Redshift

    S. Blondin et al. 2008 ApJ 682 724

  3. First-Year Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Results: Hubble Diagram and Cosmological Parameters

    Richard Kessler et al. 2009 ApJS 185 32

  4. Gasdynamics in NGC 5248: Fueling a Circumnuclear Starburst Ring of Super-Star Clusters

    Shardha Jogee et al. 2002 ApJ 575 156

  5. The JEM-EUSO mission

    Yoshiyuki Takahashi and the JEM-EUSO Collaboration 2009 New J. Phys. 11 065009

  6. Sub-milliarcsecond Imaging of Quasars and Active Galactic Nuclei. II. Additional Sources

    J. A. Zensus et al. 2002 The Astronomical Journal 124 662

  7. The effect of magnetic field on the electrical breakdown characteristics

    Marija Radmilović-Radjenović and Branislav Radjenović 2006 J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 39 3002

  8. Global scale climate–crop yield relationships and the impacts of recent warming

    David B Lobell and Christopher B Field 2007 Environ. Res. Lett. 2 014002

  9. Amplification by stochastic interference

    K Svozil et al 1996 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 29 L351

Users also read

What's this?
This innovative new feature generates a list of articles 'also read' by other users based on them reading the original article. Article abstracts citations and references are all considered and weighted accordingly. We hope that this will help you find relevant papers for your research.

  1. Spitzer IRS Spectroscopy of IRAS-discovered Debris Disks
  2. Circumstellar Dust Created by Terrestrial Planet Formation in HD 113766
  3. Warm Dust in the Terrestrial Planet Zone of a Sun-like Pleiades Star: Collisions between Planetary Embryos?

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.