Bad news for planet hunters: most of the "hot Jupiters" that
astronomers have been searching for in star clusters were likely
destroyed long ago by their stars. In a paper accepted for publication
by the Astrophysical Journal,
John Debes and Brian Jackson of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Md., offer this new explanation for why no transiting
planets (planets that pass in front of their stars and temporarily
block some of the light) have been found yet in star clusters. The
researchers also predict that the planet hunting being done by the
Kepler mission is more likely to succeed in younger star clusters than
older ones...
"Planets are elusive creatures," says Jackson, a NASA Postdoctoral
Program fellow at Goddard, "and we found another reason that they're
elusive."
When astronomers began to search for planets in star-packed globular
clusters about 10 years ago, they hoped to find many new worlds. One
survey of the cluster called 47 Tucanae (47 Tuc), for example, was
expected to find at least a dozen planets among the roughly 34,000
candidate stars. "They looked at so many stars, people thought for sure
they would find some planets," says Debes, a NASA Postdoctoral Program
fellow at Goddard. "But they didn't."
More than 450 exoplanets (short for "extrasolar planets," or planets
outside our solar system) have been found, but "most of them have been
detected around single stars," Debes notes.
"Globular clusters turn out to be rough neighborhoods for planets,"
explains Jackson, "because there are lots of stars around to beat up on
them and not much for them to eat." The high density of stars in these
clusters means that planets can be kicked out of their solar systems by
nearby stars. In addition, the globular clusters surveyed so far have
been rather poor in metals (elements heavier than hydrogen and helium),
which are the raw materials for making planets; this is known as low
metallicity.
Debes and Jackson propose that hot Jupiters—large planets that
are at least 3 to 4 times closer to their host stars than Mercury is to
our sun—are quickly destroyed. In these cramped orbits, the
gravitational pull of the planet on the star can create a
tide—that is, a bulge—on the star. As the planet orbits,
the bulge on the star points a little bit behind the planet and
essentially pulls against it; this drag reduces the energy of the
planet's orbit, and the planet moves a little closer to the star. Then
the bulge on the star gets bigger and saps even more energy from the
planet's orbit. This continues for billions of years until the planet
crashes into the star or is torn apart by the star's gravity, according
to Jackson's model of tidal orbital decay.
"The last moments for these planets can be pretty dramatic, as their
atmospheres are ripped away by their stars' gravity," says Jackson. "It
has even been suggested recently the hot Jupiter called WASP-12B is
close enough to its star that it is currently being destroyed."
Debes and Jackson modeled what would have happened in 47 Tuc if the
tidal effect were unleashed on hot Jupiters. They recreated the range
of masses and sizes of the stars in that cluster and simulated a likely
arrangement of planets. Then they let the stars' tides go to work on
the close-in planets. The model predicted that so many of these planets
would be destroyed, the survey would come up empty-handed. "Our model
shows that you don't need to consider metallicity to explain the survey
results," says Debes, "though this and other effects will also reduce
the number of planets."
Ron Gilliland, who is at the Space Telescope Science Institute in
Baltimore and participated in the 47 Tuc survey, says, "This analysis
of tidal interactions of planets and their host stars provides another
potentially good explanation—in addition to the strong
correlation between metallicity and the presence of planets—of
why we failed to detect exoplanets in 47 Tuc."
In general, Debes and Jackson's model predicts that one-third of the
hot Jupiters will be destroyed by the time a cluster is a billion years
old, which is still juvenile compared to our solar system (about 4-1/2
billion years old). 47 Tuc has recently been estimated to be more than
11 billion years old. At that age, the researchers expect more than 96%
of the hot Jupiters to be gone.
The Kepler mission, which is searching for hot Jupiters and smaller,
Earth-like planets, gives Debes and Jackson a good chance to test their
model. Kepler will survey four open clusters—groups of stars that
are not as dense as globular clusters—ranging from less than half
a billion to nearly 8 billion years old, and all of the clusters have
enough raw materials to form significant numbers of planets, Debes
notes. If tidal orbital decay is occurring, Debes and Jackson predict,
Kepler could find up to three times more Jupiter-sized planets in the
youngest cluster than in the oldest one. (An exact number depends on
the brightness of the stars, the planets' distance from the stars, and
other conditions.)
"If we do find planets in those clusters with Kepler," says Gilliland,
a Kepler co-investigator, "looking at the correlations with age and
metallicity will be interesting for shaping our understanding of the
formation of planets, as well as their continued existence after they
are formed."
If the tidal orbital decay model proves right, Debes adds, planet
hunting in clusters may become even harder. "The big, obvious planets
may be gone, so we'll have to look for smaller, more distant planets,"
he explains. "That means we will have to look for a much longer time at
large numbers of stars and use instruments that are sensitive enough to
detect these fainter planets."
The Kepler mission is managed by NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett
Field, Calif., for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters
in Washington.
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