4.6 Article

Constraining the Giant Planets' Initial Configuration from Their Evolution: Implications for the Timing of the Planetary Instability

期刊

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
卷 153, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aa5eaa

关键词

planets and satellites; dynamical evolution and stability

资金

  1. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2015/18682-6, 2014/02013-5]
  2. CAPES [2015/18682-6, 2014/02013-5]
  3. French ANR [ANR-13-13-BS05-0003-01]
  4. CNPq, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico, Brazil [307009/2014-9]
  5. NASA Emerging Worlds program

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recent works on planetary migration show that the orbital structure of the Kuiper Belt can be very well reproduced if, before the onset of planetary instability, Neptune underwent a long-range planetesimal-driven migration up to similar to 28 au. However, considering that all giant planets should have been captured in mean motion resonances among themselves during the gas-disk phase, it is not clear whether such a very specific evolution for Neptune is possible, or whether the instability could have happened at late times. Here, we first investigate which initial resonant configuration of the giant planets can be compatible with Neptune being extracted from the resonant chain and migrating to similar to 28 au before. planetary instability. We address the late instability issue by investigating the conditions where the planets can stay in resonance for about 400 Myr. Our results indicate that this can happen only in the case where the planetesimal disk is beyond a specific minimum distance delta(stab) from Neptune. Then, if there is a sufficient amount of dust produced in the planetesimal disk, which drifts inwards, Neptune can enter a slow dust-driven migration phase for hundreds of Myr until it reaches a critical distance delta(mig) from the disk. From that point, faster planetesimal-driven migration takes over and Neptune continues migrating outward until the instability happens. We conclude that although an early instability more easily reproduces the evolution of Neptune required to explain the structure of the Kuiper Belt, such evolution is also compatible with a late instability.

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