The consequences of a nearby supernova on the early Solar System
Simon Portegies Zwart (1), Inti Pelupessy (2), Arjen van Elteren (1),, Thomas Wijnen (1), Maria Lugaro (3) ((1) Leiden Observatory, (2) NleSC, (3), Konkoly Observatory)

TL;DR
This study models how a nearby supernova could have influenced the early Solar System, causing disk truncation, tilt, and heating, with implications for planetary system formation and observable signatures today.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation of supernova effects on the young Solar System, linking specific parameters to observed features like disk truncation and tilt.
Findings
Supernova blast wave at 0.15-0.40 pc can tilt the disk by ~5.6 degrees.
Supernova truncates the Kuiper belt at 42-55 au.
Heating from supernova can melt chondrules in the disk.
Abstract
If the Sun was born in a relatively compact open cluster, it is quite likely that a massive (10MSun) star was nearby when it exploded in a supernova. The repercussions of a supernova can be rather profound, and the current Solar System may still bear the memory of this traumatic event. The truncation of the Kuiper belt and the tilt of the ecliptic plane with respect to the Sun's rotation axis could be such signatures. We simulated the effect of a nearby supernova on the young Solar System using the Astronomical Multipurpose Software Environment. Our calculations are realized in two subsequent steps in which we study the effect of the supernova irradiation on the circumstellar disk and the effect of the impact of the nuclear blast-wave which arrives a few decades later. We find that the blastwave of our adopted supernova exploding at a distance of --\,pc and at an angle of…
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