Using warm dust to constrain unseen planets
Amy Bonsor, Mark C. Wyatt, Quentin Kral, Grant Kennedy, Andrew Shannon, and Steve Ertel

TL;DR
This paper introduces an empirical model based on N-body simulations to predict dust particle behavior near planets, enabling the inference of unseen planets' presence and mass from debris belt observations.
Contribution
The authors develop a rapid, empirical model to determine dust fate near planets, aiding in detecting and constraining unseen planets through debris belt analysis.
Findings
High mass planets eject most inward spiraling dust.
Low mass planets allow dust to pass relatively unperturbed.
Warm dust non-detections can imply the presence of lower mass planets.
Abstract
Cold outer debris belts orbit a significant fraction of stars, many of which are planet-hosts. Radiative forces from the star lead to dust particles leaving the outer belts and spiralling inwards under Poynting-Robertson drag. We present an empirical model fitted to N-body simulations that allows the fate of these dust particles when they encounter a planet to be rapidly calculated. High mass planets eject most particles, whilst dust passes low mass planets relatively unperturbed. Close-in, high mass planets (hot Jupiters) are best at accreting dust. The model predicts the accretion rate of dust onto planets interior to debris belts, with mass accretions rates of up to hundreds of kilograms per second predicted for hot Jupiters interior to outer debris belts, when collisional evolution is also taken into account. The model can be used to infer the presence and likely masses of as yet…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
