Debris disks as signposts of terrestrial planet formation
Sean N. Raymond, Philip J. Armitage, Amaya Moro-Mart\'in, Mark Booth,, Mark C. Wyatt, John C. Armstrong, Avi M. Mandell, Franck Selsis, Andrew A., West

TL;DR
This paper investigates how giant planet instabilities influence terrestrial planet formation and debris disks, predicting correlations between system stability, dust emission, and terrestrial planet presence, with implications for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
It introduces simulations linking giant planet dynamics to terrestrial planet formation and debris disks, highlighting the impact of instabilities on system architecture and dust production.
Findings
Strong giant planet instabilities destroy rocky material and icy planetesimals.
Stable systems allow terrestrial planets to form and produce dust.
Stars with bright cold dust emission likely have calm environments suitable for terrestrial planets.
Abstract
Circumstantial evidence suggests that most known extra-solar planetary systems are survivors of violent dynamical instabilities. Here we explore how giant planet instabilities affect the formation and survival of terrestrial planets. We simulate planetary system evolution around Sun-like stars from initial conditions that comprise: an inner disk of planetesimals and planetary embryos, three giant planets at Jupiter-Saturn distances, and a massive outer planetesimal disk. We then calculate dust production rates and debris disk SEDs assuming that each planetesimal particle represents an ensemble of smaller bodies in collisional equilibrium. We predict a strong correlation between the presence of terrestrial planets and debris disks, mediated by the giant planets. Strong giant planet instabilities destroy all rocky material - including fully-formed terrestrial planets if the instabilities…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
