Solar System Formation in the Context of Extra-Solar Planets

S. Raymond, A. Izidoro, A. Morbidelli
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引用次数: 52

Abstract

Exoplanet surveys have confirmed one of humanity's (and all teenagers') worst fears: we are weird. If our Solar System were observed with present-day Earth technology -- to put our system and exoplanets on the same footing -- Jupiter is the only planet that would be detectable. The statistics of exo-Jupiters indicate that the Solar System is unusual at the ~1% level among Sun-like stars (or ~0.1% among all stars). But why are we different? Successful formation models for both the Solar System and exoplanet systems rely on two key processes: orbital migration and dynamical instability. Systems of close-in super-Earths or sub-Neptunes require substantial radial inward motion of solids either as drifting mm- to cm-sized pebbles or migrating Earth-mass or larger planetary embryos. We argue that, regardless of their formation mode, the late evolution of super-Earth systems involves migration into chains of mean motion resonances, generally followed by instability when the disk dissipates. This pattern is likely also ubiquitous in giant planet systems. We present three models for inner Solar System formation -- the low-mass asteroid belt, Grand Tack, and Early Instability models -- each invoking a combination of migration and instability. We identify bifurcation points in planetary system formation. We present a series of events to explain why our Solar System is so weird. Jupiter's core must have formed fast enough to quench the growth of Earth's building blocks by blocking the flux of inward-drifting pebbles. The large Jupiter/Saturn mass ratio is rare among giant exoplanets but may be required to maintain Jupiter's wide orbit. The giant planets' instability must have been gentle, with no close encounters between Jupiter and Saturn, also unusual in the larger (exoplanet) context. Our Solar System system is thus the outcome of multiple unusual, but not unheard of, events.
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太阳系外行星背景下的太阳系形成
系外行星调查证实了人类(以及所有青少年)最可怕的恐惧之一:我们很奇怪。如果用现在的地球技术来观察我们的太阳系——把我们的系统和系外行星放在同一个基础上——木星是唯一可以探测到的行星。外木星的统计数据表明,太阳系在类太阳恒星中是不寻常的,在~1%的水平(或在所有恒星中~0.1%)。但是为什么我们不同呢?太阳系和系外行星系统的成功形成模型依赖于两个关键过程:轨道迁移和动态不稳定性。近距离的超级地球或亚海王星系统需要大量的固体向内径向运动,如漂流的毫米到厘米大小的鹅卵石或迁移的地球质量或更大的行星胚胎。我们认为,无论它们的形成模式如何,超级地球系统的后期演化涉及到迁移到平均运动共振链中,通常伴随着磁盘消散时的不稳定性。这种模式可能在巨大的行星系统中也普遍存在。我们提出了太阳系内部形成的三个模型——低质量小行星带、大Tack和早期不稳定模型——每个模型都援引了迁移和不稳定的组合。我们确定了行星系统形成的分岔点。我们展示了一系列事件来解释为什么我们的太阳系如此奇怪。木星的核心一定形成得足够快,通过阻挡向内漂移的鹅卵石的流动来抑制地球构造块的增长。木星/土星的大质量比在巨大的系外行星中是罕见的,但可能需要保持木星的宽轨道。巨行星的不稳定性一定是温和的,木星和土星之间没有近距离接触,这在更大的(系外行星)背景下也是不寻常的。因此,我们的太阳系是多个不寻常但并非闻所未闻的事件的结果。
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