SCI Giant hidden Jupiters may explain lonely planet systems

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.newscientist.com/articl...n-jupiters-may-explain-lonely-planet-systems/

DAILY NEWS
3 October 2016

Giant hidden Jupiters may explain lonely planet systems

By Marcus Woo

Lonely planets can blame big, pushy bullies. Giant planets may bump off most of their smaller brethren, partly explaining why the Kepler space telescope has seen so many single-planet systems.

Of the thousands of planetary systems Kepler has discovered, about 80 per cent appear as single planets passing in front of their stars. The rest feature as many as seven planets – a distinction dubbed the Kepler dichotomy.

Recent studies suggest even starker differences. While multiple-planet systems tend to have circular orbits that all lie in the same plane – like our solar system – the orbits of singletons tend to be more elliptical and are often misaligned with the spins of their stars.

Now, a pair of computer simulations suggest that hidden giants may lurk in these single systems. We wouldn’t be able to see them; big, Jupiter-like planets in wide orbits would take too long for Kepler to catch, and they may not have orbits that cause them to pass in front of their stars in our line of sight. But if these unseen bullies are there, they may have removed many of the smaller planets in closer orbits, leaving behind the solitary worlds that Kepler sees.

The simulations show that gravitational interactions involving giants in outer orbits can eject smaller planets from the system, nudge them into their stars or send them crashing into each other.

Pushy planets
“There are bigger things out there trying to pull you around,” says Chelsea Huang at the University of Toronto, Canada. She and her team also showed the giants pull the few remaining inner planets into more elliptical and inclined orbits – the same kind seen in many of the single systems Kepler has spotted.

Alex Mustill at Lund Observatory in Sweden and his colleagues mimicked more general scenarios, including planets orbiting a binary star system, and got similar results. The studies complement each other, say Huang and Mustill.

“We know these configurations have to occur in some fraction of exoplanet systems,” Mustill says.

But that doesn’t mean they’re universal. “They don’t occur all the time, and this is one reason why you can’t explain the large number of single planets purely through this mechanism,” Mustill says. According to his analysis, bullying giants can only account for about 18 per cent of Kepler’s singles.

To confirm their proposed mechanism, the researchers must wait until next year for the launch of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), which will target closer and brighter systems – and thus be easier for follow-up observations to uncover the bully planets.

Journal references: arXiv; arxiv.org/abs/1609.08110, arxiv.org/abs/1609.08058
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Instead of spending all that money for research, they could wait a couple hundred or so years and then let Captain Kirk go figure it all out for them.

I'm not real fond of computer simulations. Aren't simulations what came up with global warming and probably any number of other theories that we're supposed to blindly accept?

Seriously, though, I do find this sort of thing hugely interesting.
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
I'm not real fond of computer simulations. Aren't simulations what came up with global warming and probably any number of other theories that we're supposed to blindly accept?

If you accept things blindly, you've got a personal problem. Computer simulations are often the best tool we have for uncovering patterns in what looks like chaos, and subtle rhythms that otherwise would elude us.
 

Satanta

Stone Cold Crazy
_______________
You mean like gravity?


No, no, no you silly person. Gravity was created by some dude sitting under an apple tree. Apple fell and bonked him on his noggin. He came up with gravity and that was several hundred years before computers. Before him nothing ever fell, it just floated off into space.
 
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