Summary: New simulations are providing scientists with a glimpse of what our solar system may look like to alien astronomers. The study could helps astronomers in the search for habitable planetary systems around distant stars...
New supercomputer simulations tracking the interactions of thousands of dust grains show what the Solar System might look like to alien astronomers searching for planets. The models also provide a glimpse of how this view might have changed as our planetary system matured.
“The planets may be too dim to detect directly, but aliens
studying the Solar System could easily determine the presence of Neptune
-- its gravity carves a little gap in the dust,” said Marc
Kuchner, an astrophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Md. who led the study. “We’re hoping our
models will help us spot Neptune-sized worlds around other
stars.”
The dust originates in the Kuiper Belt,
a cold-storage zone beyond Neptune where millions of icy bodies --
including Pluto -- orbit the Sun. Scientists believe the region is an
older, leaner version of the debris disks they’ve seen around
stars like Vega and Fomalhaut.
“Our new simulations also allow us to see how dust from the
Kuiper Belt might have looked when the Solar System was much
younger,” said Christopher Stark, who worked with Kuchner at NASA
Goddard and is now at the Carnegie Institution for Science in
Washington, D.C. “In effect, we can go back in time and see how
the distant view of the Solar System may have changed.”
Kuiper Belt objects occasionally crash into each other, and this
relentless bump-and-grind produces a flurry of icy grains. But tracking
how this dust travels through the Solar System isn’t easy because
small particles are subject to a variety of forces in addition to the
gravitational pull of the Sun and planets.
The grains are affected by the solar wind, which works to bring dust
closer to the Sun, and sunlight, which can either pull dust inward or
push it outward. Exactly what happens depends on the size of the grain.
The particles also run into each other, and these collisions can
destroy the fragile grains. A paper on the new models, which are the
first to include collisions among grains, appeared in the Sept. 7
edition of The Astronomical Journal.
“People felt that the collision calculation couldn’t be
done because there are just too many of these tiny grains too keep
track of,” Kuchner said. “We found a way to do it, and that
has opened up a whole new landscape.”
With the help of NASA’s Discover supercomputer, the researchers
kept tabs on 75,000 dust particles as they interacted with the outer
planets, sunlight, the solar wind -- and each other.
The size of the model dust ranged from about the width of a
needle’s eye (0.05 inch or 1.2 millimeters) to more than a
thousand times smaller, similar in size to the particles in smoke.
During the simulation, the grains were placed into one of three types
of orbits found in today’s Kuiper Belt at a rate based on current
ideas of how quickly dust is produced.
From the resulting data, the researchers created synthetic images
representing infrared views of the Solar System seen from afar.
Through gravitational effects called resonances, Neptune wrangles
nearby particles into preferred orbits. This is what creates the clear
zone near the planet as well as dust enhancements that precede and
follow it around the Sun.
“One thing we’ve learned is that, even in the present-day
solar system, collisions play an important role in the Kuiper
Belt’s structure,” Stark explained. That’s because
collisions tend to destroy large particles before they can drift too
far from where they’re made. This results in a relatively dense
dust ring that straddles Neptune’s orbit.
To get a sense of what younger, heftier versions of the Kuiper Belt
might have looked like, the team sped up the dust production rate. In
the past, the Kuiper Belt contained many more objects that crashed
together more frequently, generating dust at a faster pace. With more
dust particles came more frequent grain collisions.
Using
separate models that employed progressively higher collision rates, the
team produced images roughly corresponding to dust generation that was
10, 100 and 1,000 times more intense than in the original model. The
scientists estimate the increased dust reflects conditions when the Kuiper Belt was, respectively, 700 million, 100 million and 15 million years old.
“We were just astounded by what we saw,” Kuchner said.
As collisions become increasingly important, the likelihood that large
dust grains will survive to drift out of the Kuiper Belt drops sharply.
Stepping back through time, today’s broad dusty disk collapses
into a dense, bright ring that bears more than a passing resemblance to
rings seen around other stars, especially Fomalhaut.
“The amazing thing is that we’ve already seen these narrow
rings around other stars,” Stark said. “One of our next
steps will be to simulate the debris disks around Fomalhaut and other
stars to see what the dust distribution tells us about the presence of
planets.”
The researchers also plan to develop a more complete picture of the
solar system’s dusty disk by modeling additional sources closer
to the Sun, including the main asteroid belt and the thousands of
so-called Trojan asteroids corralled by Jupiter’s gravity.