Collisional Evolution of Irregular Satellite Swarms: Detectable Dust around Solar System and Extrasolar Planets
Grant M. Kennedy, Mark C. Wyatt

TL;DR
This paper models the collisional evolution of irregular satellite swarms around planets, predicts detectable dust signatures around Solar System and extrasolar planets, and suggests these dust features can reveal hidden planets and their histories.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model for satellite swarm evolution, linking dust production to observable signatures around planets in our Solar System and beyond.
Findings
Dust levels around Solar System planets may be detectable.
JWST could detect dust from extrasolar satellite swarms.
Fomalhaut b's observed light may originate from satellite swarm dust.
Abstract
Since the 1980's it has been becoming increasingly clear that the Solar System's irregular satellites are collisionally evolved. We derive a general model for the collisional evolution of an irregular satellite swarm and apply it to the Solar System and extrasolar planets. Our model reproduces the Solar System's complement of observed irregulars well, and suggests that the competition between grain-grain collisions and Poynting-Robertson (PR) drag helps set the fate of the dust. Because swarm collision rates decrease over time the main dust sink can change with time, and may help unravel the accretion history of synchronously rotating regular satellites that show brightness asymmetries. Some level of dust must be present on AU scales around the Solar System's giant planets, which we predict may be at detectable levels. We also predict whether dust produced by extrasolar circumplanetary…
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