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The Chemistry of Extrasolar Planetary Systems. Jade Bond PhD Defense 31 st October 2008. Extrasolar Planets. First detected in 1995 313 known planets inc. 5 “super-Earths” Host stars appear metal-rich, esp. Fe Similar trends in Mg, Si, Al. Santos et al. (2003). Neutron Capture Elements.
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The Chemistry of Extrasolar Planetary Systems Jade Bond PhD Defense 31st October 2008
Extrasolar Planets First detected in 1995 313 known planets inc. 5 “super-Earths” Host stars appear metal-rich, esp. Fe Similar trends in Mg, Si, Al Santos et al. (2003)
Neutron Capture Elements Look beyond the “Iron peak” and consider r- and s-process elements Specific formation environments r-process: supernovae s-process: AGB stars, He burning
Neutron Capture Elements 118 F and G type stars (28 hosts) from the Anglo-Australian Planet Search Y, Zr, Ba (s-process) Eu (r-process) and Nd (mix) Mg, O, Cr to complement previous work
Host Star Enrichment Mean [Y/H] Host: -0.05 + 0.03 Non-Host: -0.16 + 0.01 [Y/H] Slope Host: 0.87 Non-Host: 0.78 Mean [Eu/H] Host: -0.10 + 0.03 Non-Host: -0.16 + 0.02 [Eu/H] Slope Host: 0.56 Non-Host: 0.48
Host Star Enrichment Host stars enriched over non-host stars Elemental abundances are in keeping with galactic evolutionary trends
Host Star Enrichment No correlation with planetary parameters Enrichment is PRIMORDIAL not photospheric pollution
Two Big Questions • Are terrestrial planets likely to exist in known extrasolar planetary systems? • What would they be like?
Chemistry meets Dynamics • Most dynamical studies of planetesimal formation have neglected chemical constraints • Most chemical studies of planetesimal formation have neglected specific dynamical studies • This issue has become more pronounced with studies of extrasolar planetary systems which are both dynamically and chemically unusual • Astrobiologically significant
Chemistry meets Dynamics • Combine dynamical models of terrestrial planet formation with chemical equilibrium models of the condensation of solids in the protoplanetary nebulae • Determine if terrestrial planets are likely to form and their bulk elemental abundances
Dynamical simulations reproduce the terrestrial planets • Use very high resolution n-body accretion simulations of terrestrial planet accretion (e.g. O’Brien et al. 2006) • Start with 25 Mars mass embryos and ~1000 planetesimals from 0.3 AU to 4 AU • Incorporate dynamical friction • Neglects mass loss
Equilibrium thermodynamics predict bulk compositions of planetesimals Davis (2006)
Equilibrium thermodynamics predict bulk compositions of planetesimals • Consider 16 elements: H, He, C, N, O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, P, S, Ca, Ti, Cr, Fe, Ni • Assign each embryo and planetesimal a composition based on formation region • Adopt the P-T profiles of Hersant et al (2001) at 7 time steps (0.25 – 3 Myr) • Assume no volatile loss during accretion, homogeneity and equilibrium is maintained
“Ground Truthing” • Consider a Solar System simulation: • 1.15 MEarth at 0.64AU • 0.81 MEarth at 1.21AU • 0.78 MEarth at 1.69AU
Results • Reasonable agreement with planetary abundances • Values are within 1 wt%, except for Mg, O, Fe and S • Normalized deviations: • Na (up to 4x) • S (up to 3.5x) • Water rich (CJS) • Geochemical ratios between Earth and Mars
Extrasolar “Earths” • Apply same methodology to extrasolar systems • Use spectroscopic photospheric abundances (H, He, C, N, O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, P, S, Ca, Ti, Cr, Fe, Ni) • Compositions determined by equilibrium • Embryos from 0.3 AU to innermost giant planet • No planetesimals • Assumed closed systems
Assumptions In-situ formation (dynamics) Inner region formation (dynamics) Snapshot approach (chemistry) Sensitive to the timing of condensation and equilibration (chemistry)
Extrasolar “Earths” • Terrestrial planets formed in ALL systems studied • Most <1 Earth-mass within 2AU of the host star • Often multiple terrestrial planets formed • Low degrees of radial mixing
Extrasolar “Earths” • Examine four ESP systems • Gl777A –1.04 MSUN G star, [Fe/H] = 0.24 • 0.06 MJ planet at 0.13AU • 1.50 MJ planet at 3.92AU • HD72659 –0.95 MSUN G star, [Fe/H] = -0.14 • 3.30 MJ planet at 4.16AU • HD199941.35 MSUN F star, [Fe/H] = 0.23 • 1.69 MJ at 1.43AU • HD4203 –1.06 MSUN G star, [Fe/H] = 0.22 • 2.10 MJ planet at 1.09AU
Gl777A 1.10 MEarth at 0.89AU
HD72659 1.35 MEarth at 0.89AU
HD72659 1.53 MEarth at 0.38AU
HD72659 1.53 MEarth 1.35 MEarth
HD19994 0.62 MEarth at 0.37AU 7 wt% C 16 wt% 32 wt% 45 wt%
HD4203 0.17 MEarth at 0.28AU 53 wt% 43 wt%
Two Classes • Earth-like & refractory compositions (Gl777A, HD72659) • C-rich compositions (HD19994, HD4203)
Terrestrial Planets are likely in most ESP systems • Terrestrial planets are common • Geology of these planets may be unlike anything we see in the Solar System • Earth-like planets • Carbon as major rock-forming mineral • Implications for plate tectonics, interior structure, surface features, atmospheric compositions, planetary detection . . .
Water and Habitability All planets form “dry” Exogenous delivery and adsorption limited in C-rich systems Hydrous species Water vapor restricted 6 Earth-like planets produced in habitable zone Ideal targets for future surveys
Take-Home Message Extrasolar planetary systems are enriched but with normal evolutions Dynamical models predict that terrestrial planets are common Two main types of planets: Earth-like C-rich Wide variety of planetary implications
There is more stupidity than hydrogen in the universe, and it has a longer shelf life. Frank Zappa Frank Zappa