PSJC #187 March 27 2015
Akbar Whizin
Jupiter's decisive role in the inner Solar System's early evolution
We will discuss a paper by
Batygin and Laughlin (2015)
that was just published this year in PNAS.
The abstract is as follows:
The statistics of extrasolar planetary systems indicate that the default
mode of planet formation generates planets with orbital periods shorter
than 100 days and masses substantially exceeding that of the Earth. When
viewed in this context, the Solar System is unusual. Here, we present
simulations which show that a popular formation scenario for Jupiter
and Saturn, in which Jupiter migrates inward from a > 5 astronomical
units (AU) to a ≈ 1.5 AU before reversing direction, can explain
the low overall mass of the Solar System's terrestrial planets,
as well as the absence of planets with a < 0.4 AU. Jupiter's inward
migration entrained s ≥ 10-100 km planetesimals into low-order mean
motion resonances, shepherding and exciting their orbits. The resulting
collisional cascade generated a planetesimal disk that, evolving under
gas drag, would have driven any preexisting short-period planets into the
Sun. In this scenario, the Solar System's terrestrial planets formed
from gas-starved mass-depleted debris that remained after the primary
period of dynamical evolution.