News on Exoplanets
- Freefloationg exoplanet may outnumber stars
- First direct ligth from Earthlike exoplanet
- Look for Jupiter-like planets, when you search for Earth-like planets
- Stars occasionally capture wandering planets
- Discovery of two planetary babies
- New study suggests the Solarsystem is the norm
- A star with 9 exoplanets
- Discovery of 2 very old exoplanets
- Millions of Earthlike planets in th eMilkyway
- Premature planetary-formation
- Runaway planets
- Kepler releases new catalog-2321 planet candidates
- Water in the atmosphere of a super-Earth
- New 3D model for planetary accretion
- Red dwarf stars may be more habitable than imagined
- Our galaxy may swarm with free--floating planets
- Hubble reveals a new class of exoplanet
- Discovery of potential habitable exoplanet
- 11 new solarsystems hosting 26 planets discovered
- First SETI observations of Kepler candidates
- Discovery of smallest known exoplanets
- New class of planetary system
- Searching for habitable exo-moons
- Discovery of 2 Earth-size planets raises questions about stellar evolution
- Kepler discovers first truly Earth-sized planets
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Rocky planet were born as gas-giants
Saturday, 17 September 2011 22:58
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| Astronomy - Exoplanets |
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When NASA announced the discovery of over 1200 new potential planets spotted by the Kepler Space Telescope, almost a quarter of them were thought to be Super-Earths. Now, new research suggests that these massive rocky planets may be the result of the failed creation of Jupiter-sized gas giants. Most astronomers currently believe planets are created by a method known as core accretion. Giant disks of gas circle newborn stars. Grains in these disks bond together to form larger objects known as planetesimals, which collide, creating larger and larger clumps of material. When the clumps reach a critical mass, their gravity pulls in gas from the disk around them. "Once you have a core, it may build up an atmosphere around it," Nayakshin explained. "The atmosphere is dominated by hydrogen, but it is much more chemically-rich than the primordial dust material." In this respect, Aaron Boley of the University of Florida says that if planets do form as described by the tidal disruption theory, then planets may be able to form in systems that are unfavorable to the core accretion mechanism, such as in disks with little dust. Although he did not work with Nayakshin, he explored a similar theory early last year. Gravitational instability allows for the rapid creation of planetesimals at a distance from the star, but it doesn't allow them to migrate inward. As such, it can't account for many of the closer planets seen today. "Tidal downsizing and core accretion are both mechanisms that can form a wide range of planets," Boley said. "They occur during different stages of a proto-planetary disk's lifetime, and are not mutually exclusive." Source: NASA |





In tidal downsizing, a gas disk first forms massive gas clumps farther out in space than where most of the planets discovered so far reside in their solar systems. Left to their own devices, these clumps would cool and contract into very massive (~10 Jupiter mass) planets. Nayakshin showed that during this contraction dust grains grow to large sizes and then fall to the center of the gas clump, forming a massive solid core there – the proto-rocky planet within the much more massive gas cocoon.
However, the surrounding disk pushes the planet in, closer to the star, and there the outer layers of the gas envelope start to be disrupted and actually consumed by the star.