Monday, December 09, 2013

New Model Seems to be Accurate for Formation of Superearth Exoplanets

COAGULATION CALCULATIONS OF ICY PLANET FORMATION AROUND 0.1-0.5 M ☉ STARS: SUPER-EARTHS FROM LARGE PLANETESTIMALS

Authors:

Scott J. Kenyon and Benjamin C. Bromley

Abstract:

We investigate formation mechanisms for icy super-Earth-mass planets orbiting at 2-20 AU around 0.1-0.5 M ☉ stars. A large ensemble of coagulation calculations demonstrates a new formation channel: disks composed of large planetesimals with radii of 30-300 km form super-Earths on timescales of ~1 Gyr. In other gas-poor disks, a collisional cascade grinds planetesimals to dust before the largest planets reach super-Earth masses. Once icy Earth-mass planets form, they migrate through the leftover swarm of planetesimals at rates of 0.01-1 AU Myr–1. On timescales of 10 Myr to 1 Gyr, many of these planets migrate through the disk of leftover planetesimals from semimajor axes of 5-10 AU to 1-2 AU. A few percent of super-Earths might migrate to semimajor axes of 0.1-0.2 AU. When the disk has an initial mass comparable with the minimum-mass solar nebula, scaled to the mass of the central star, the predicted frequency of super-Earths matches the observed frequency.

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