Astronomers have long been aware that planetary systems are not necessarily structured like our solar system. Researchers have now shown that there are in fact four types of planetary systems.
From: University of Bern
February 14, 2023 -- In
our solar system, everything seems to be in order: The smaller rocky planets,
such as Venus, Earth or Mars, orbit relatively close to our star. The large gas
and ice giants, such as Jupiter, Saturn or Neptune, on the other hand, move in
wide orbits around the sun. In two studies published in the scientific journal Astronomy
& Astrophysics, researchers from the Universities of Bern and Geneva
and the National Centre of Competence in Research (NCCR) PlanetS show that our
planetary system is quite unique in this respect.
Like peas in a pod
"More than a
decade ago, astronomers noticed, based on observations with the then
groundbreaking Kepler telescope, that planets in other systems usually resemble
their respective neighbours in size and mass – like peas in a pod," says
study lead author Lokesh Mishra, researcher at the University of Bern and
Geneva, as well as the NCCR PlanetS. But for a long time it was unclear whether
this finding was due to limitations of observational methods. "It was not
possible to determine whether the planets in any individual system were similar
enough to fall into the class of the ‘peas in a pod’ systems, or whether they
were rather different – just like in our solar system," says Mishra.
Therefore, the
researcher developed a framework to determine the differences and similarities
between planets of the same systems. And in doing so, he discovered that there
are not two, but four such system architectures.
Four classes of
planetary systems
"We call these
four classes 'similar', 'ordered', 'anti-ordered' and 'mixed'," says
Mishra. Planetary systems in which the masses of neighbouring planets are
similar to each other, have similar architecture. Ordered planetary systems are
those, in which the mass of the planets tends to increase with distance from
the star – just as in our solar system. If, on the other hand, the mass of the
planets roughly decreases with distance from the star, researchers speak of an
anti-ordered architecture of the system. And mixed architectures occur, when
the planetary masses in a system vary greatly from planet to planet.
"This framework
can also be applied to any other measurements, such as radius, density or water
fractions," says study co-author Yann Alibert, Professor of Planetary
Science at the University of Bern and the NCCR PlanetS. "Now, for the
first time, we have a tool to study planetary systems as a whole and compare
them with other systems."
The findings also raise
questions: Which architecture is the most common? Which factors control the
emergence of an architecture type? Which factors do not play a role? Some of
these, the researchers can answer.
A bridge spanning
billions of years
"Our results show
that 'similar' planetary systems are the most common type of architecture.
About eight out of ten planetary systems around stars visible in the night sky
have a 'similar' architecture," says Mishra. "This also explains why
evidence of this architecture was found in the first few months of the Kepler
mission." What surprised the team was that the "ordered" architecture
– the one that also includes the solar system – seems to be the rarest class.
According to Mishra,
there are indications that both the mass of the gas and dust disk from which
the planets emerge, as well as the abundance of heavy elements in the
respective star play a role. "From rather small, low-mass disks and stars
with few heavy elements, 'similar' planetary systems emerge. Large, massive
disks with many heavy elements in the star give rise to more ordered and
anti-ordered systems. Mixed systems emerge from medium-sized disks. Dynamic
interactions between planets – such as collisions or ejections – influence the
final architecture," Mishra explains.
"A remarkable
aspect of these results is that it links the initial conditions of planetary
and stellar formation to a measurable property: the system architecture.
Billions of years of evolution lie in between them. For the first time, we have
succeeded in bridging this huge temporal gap and making testable predictions.
It will be exciting to see if they will hold up," Alibert concludes.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/02/230214154018.htm
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