Debris disc stirring by secular perturbations from giant planets
Alexander Mustill (1), Mark Wyatt (1) ((1) IoA, Cambridge, UK)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that secular perturbations from giant planets can effectively stir debris discs, inducing collisions and dust production over specific time-scales, impacting planet formation and debris disc observations.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of how distant giant planets can dynamically excite debris discs through secular perturbations, affecting collision rates and planet formation.
Findings
Secular perturbations can cause orbit crossing in debris discs within certain time-scales.
Giant planets can induce destructive collisions out to hundreds of AU.
Observed debris discs can be stirred by planets without requiring Pluto-sized objects.
Abstract
Detectable debris discs are thought to require dynamical excitation (`stirring'), so that planetesimal collisions release large quantities of dust. We investigate the effects of the secular perturbations of a planet, which may lie at a significant distance from the planetesimal disc, to see if these perturbations can stir the disc, and if so over what time-scale. The secular perturbations cause orbits at different semi-major axes to precess at different rates, and after some time t_cross initially non-intersecting orbits begin to cross. We show that t_cross is proportional to a_disc^(9/2)/(m_pl e_pl a_pl^3), where m_pl, e_pl and a_pl are the mass, eccentricity, and semi-major axis of the planet, and a_disc is the semi-major axis of the disc. This time-scale can be faster than that for the growth of planetesimals to Pluto's size within the outer disc. We also calculate the magnitude of…
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