Forming planetary systems that contain only minor planets
Dimitri Veras, Shigeru Ida

TL;DR
This paper investigates the formation of planetary systems composed solely of minor planets and smaller debris, suggesting such systems could be common and influence our understanding of white dwarf pollution.
Contribution
It introduces planetary population synthesis models showing conditions under which only minor planets form, highlighting the role of initial dust mass in such systems.
Findings
Sub-terrestrial systems can form under certain initial conditions.
Total dust mass up to 100 Earth masses can prevent terrestrial planet formation.
Minor planet-only systems may be more prevalent than previously thought.
Abstract
Estimates of the frequency of planetary systems in the Milky Way are observationally limited by the low-mass planet regime. Nevertheless, substantial evidence for systems with undetectably low planetary masses now exist in the form of main-sequence stars which host debris discs, as well as metal-polluted white dwarfs. Further, low-mass sections of star formation regions impose upper bounds on protoplanetary disc masses, limiting the capacity for terrestrial or larger planets to form. Here, we use planetary population synthesis calculations to investigate the conditions that allow planetary systems to form only minor planets and smaller detritus. We simulate the accretional, collisional and migratory growth of kg embryonic seeds and then quantify which configurations with *entirely* sub-Earth-mass bodies ( kg) survive. We find that substantial regions of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science
