4.6 Article

FORMATION OF CENTAURS' RINGS THROUGH THEIR PARTIAL TIDAL DISRUPTION DURING PLANETARY ENCOUNTERS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 828, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8205/828/1/L8

Keywords

comets: general; minor planets; asteroids: general; minor planets; asteroids: individual (10199 Chariklo, 2060 Chiron); planets and satellites: rings; planets and satellites: formation

Funding

  1. JSPS [15J02110, 22340125, 15H03716]
  2. UnivEarthS Labex program at Sorbonne Paris Cite [ANR-10-LABX- 0023, ANR-11-IDEX-0005-02]
  3. Universite Paris Diderot
  4. Campus Spatial grant
  5. IUF (Institut Universitaire de France)
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15J02110, 15H03716, 15K13562, 22340125] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Centaurs are minor planets orbiting between Jupiter and Neptune that have or had crossing orbits with one or more giant planets. Recent observations and reinterpretation of previous observations have revealed the existence of ring systems around 10199 Chariklo and 2060 Chiron. However, the origin of the ring systems around such a minor planet is still an open question. Here, we propose that the tidal disruption of a differentiated object that experiences a close encounter with a giant planet could naturally form diverse ring-satellite systems around the Centaurs. During the close encounter, the icy mantle of the passing object is preferentially ripped off by the planet' s tidal force and the debris is distributed mostly within the Roche limit of the largest remnant body. Assuming the existence of a 20-50 wt% silicate core below the icy mantle, a disk of particles is formed when the objects pass within 0.4-0.8 of the planet' s Roche limit with the relative velocity at infinity 3-6 km s(-1) and 8 hr initial spin period of the body. The resultant ring mass is 0.1%-10% of the central object' s mass. Such particle disks are expected to spread radially, and materials spreading beyond the Roche limit would accrete into satellites. Our numerical results suggest that ring formation would be a natural outcome of such extreme close encounters, and Centaurs can naturally have such ring systems because they cross the orbits of the giant planets.

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