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New low-mass objects could help refine planetary evolution

Artist's view of a dust disc around a brown dwarf. (Credit: R. Dienel)
Artist's view of a dust disc around a brown dwarf. (Credit: R. Dienel)

When a star is young, it is often still surrounded by a primordial rotating disk of gas and dust from which planets can form. Astronomers like to find such disks because they might be able to catch the star partway through the planet-formation process, but it’s highly unusual to find such disks around brown dwarfs or stars with very low masses. New work from a team led by Anne Boucher of iREx at Université de Montréal, has discovered four new low-mass objects surrounded by disks. The results will be published by The Astrophysical Journal.

Three of the four objects discovered by these researchers are quite small, somewhere between only 13 and 18 times the mass of Jupiter. The fourth has about 120 times Jupiter’s mass. (For comparison the Sun is just over 1,000 times more massive than Jupiter.)

“Finding disks in low-mass systems is really interesting to us, because objects that exist at the lower limit of what defines a star and that still have disks that indicate planet formation can tell us a lot about both stellar and planetary evolution,” said first author Boucher, who works at her university’s Institute for Research on Exoplanets (iREx).

In a planet-forming disk, the dust grains collide and aggregate to form pebbles, which grow into boulders, and so on, increasing in size through planetesimals, planetary embryos, and finally rocky terrestrial planets (some of which then become the cores for gas giant planets). Astronomers are able to identify these types of planet-birthing disks, because the star heats up the surrounding dust, which affects the way it looks using a telescope with an infrared camera.

However, some disks indicate that planet formation isn’t ongoing, but has already finished. These disks are made up of the debris left behind by all the collisions during planet formation and by subsequent collisions of the newly formed planets. Eventually these dusty remains are swept away. But until that happens, a cooler, thinner ring of dust surrounds the star.

Some disks even represent an intermediate stage between the planet-forming and dusty remnant phases.

It’s important for astronomers to try to distinguish between these different types of disks, because then they can better chart the way planetary systems, including our own Solar System, are born and change over time.

The research team was able to determine that the disks surrounding their four newly discovered low-mass objects were all likely in a phase of planet forming. None were in the dusty aftermath phase.

Even more interesting, two of the objects are possibly between 42 and 45 million years old. This would make them the oldest objects surrounded by active disk systems ever found.

“There is still so much to learn about disks around low-mass objects such as these four,” concluded Jonathan Gagné, an iREx collaborator who is now post-doctoral fellow at Carnegie Institution for Science. “Hopefully, we can conduct further research on them and be able to narrow down what kind of activity is happening in them and whether or not they would be good targets for future planet hunters.”

The other co-authors are: David Lafrenière and René Doyon of iREx at Université de Montréal, Lison Malo of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope and iREx, Jackie Faherty, from Carnegie Institution for Science, and Christine Chen from Space Telescope Science Institute.

 

Reference

Anne Boucher, David Lafrenière, Jonathan Gagné, Lison Malo, Jacqueline K. Faherty, René Doyon, Christine H. Chen, BANYAN. VIII. New low-mass stars and brown dwarfs with candidate circumstellar disks, The Astrophysical Journal, 2016 (accepted).

 

More information

Anne Boucher
Institute for research on exoplanets
Université de Montréal
Telephone : (514) 343 6111 ext. 3797
boucher@astro.umontreal.ca

 

The Institute for Research on Exoplanets (iREx) brings together top researchers and their students so as to benefit as much as possible from major current and upcoming observation projects, with the ultimate goal of finding life elsewhere. The Institute is devoted to exploring new worlds and seeking life on other planets.

Carnegie Institution for Science is a private, nonprofit organization for scientific discovery, founded by Andrew Carnegie in 1902 and intended to be home to exceptional individuals at the cutting edge of their fields. Based in Washington D.C., it hosts six departments located all across the United States, which cover a broad spectrum of natural and physical sciences ranging from astronomy, developmental biology, genetics, plant science, global ecology, astrophysics and geochemistry.