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PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 1 Final exam: Major Revision Topics Exoplanet finding techniques Distances – cosmic ladder Distance modulus Kepler’s laws Planet formation processes Hertzsprung-Russell tracks Planets; Density of, escape speed from. Solar atmosphere Molecular cloud evolution/collapse Protostars: classes, accretion rate, envelopes, cores. Lectures Week 8: Star Formation & Theory of Exoplanets 1. Intro: Star formation is on-going. What is the origin of our solar system? Descartes, Kant, Laplace: vortices, nebular hypothesis: importance of angular momentum. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 2 Major facts for nebula hypothesis: Coplanar orbits of the planets All planets have prograde revolution (orbits) The revolution of rings and natural moons are all prograde (some moons of the outer planets are not prograde, but these are believed to be captured satellites) All planets except Venus and Uranus have prograde rotation The sun contains all the mass The planets (especially Jupiter and Saturn) contain most of the angular momentum in the solar system Small, dense, iron and silicate rich planets in the inner 2 AU. Slow rotors, few or no moons, no rings, differentiated (molten interiors) Large, low density, gaseous planets rich in H, He and volatile elements at >= 5 AU Rapid rotors, many moons, all have ring systems Abundance gradient. Inner solar system is poor in light volatile gases such as H, He, but rich in Fe & Ni. Outer solar system is rich in volatiles H, He, etc. Abundances similar to that of the sun. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 3 In general: Gravity is fast-acting. Galaxy is old. But young stars are still being born. Stars don't live forever, they must continue to be "born". Where? Born in obscurity….needed infrared/millimeter/radio wavelengths. 2. Molecular clouds: ingredients Young stars are located in or near molecular clouds (the stellar factories/nurseries). Stars mainly form in clusters in giant molecular clouds. Over 90% of atoms tied up in molecules. 99.99% is molecular hydrogen: H2 Over 120 other molecules discovered, including water, carbon monoxide CO, formaldehyde H2CO, ammonia NH3, hydrogen cyanide HCN, formic acid HCOOH and methanol CH3CO Admixture of dust: 1% by mass– tiny grains (less than 1 micron in size) of silicates/graphite with ice coatingss, or soot (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or PAHs). Cosmic rays, magnetic field. The large amount of gas and dust in the cloud shields the molecules from UV radiation from stars in our galaxy. The molecules can then cool the gas down to 10-30K. Dense cold cores can form (eggs?) in which gravity rules). The H2 molecules cannot form by H-H collisions (excess energy needs an outlet). H2 forms on dust, atoms stick, migrate, bind, ejected. Other molecules form through collisions (ion-chemistry). 3. Molecular clouds: anatomy Opaque at UV and visible wavelengths. Bright and luminous at millimetre wavelengths: dust continuum. Bright rotational and vibrational molecular emission lines at radio and infrared wavelengths. Molecular clouds are cold: 8<= Tkin<=20 K Typical value ~10 K Low ionization: fe =ne/n ~10-6 - 10-7 => very neutral! PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 4 High density: n(H2) >= 100 cm-3 Giant molecular clouds are very massive: M~ 104 to 106 solar masses Giant molecular clouds are large: Diameters ~ 325 ly They are clumpy Supersonic gas motions are found in almost all clouds Line widths ~ 0.5 to 2 km s-1; sound speed ~ 0.2 km s-1 indicative of nonthermal motions such as rotation, turbulence, shocks, contraction or expansion, stellar bipolar outflows, etc. Measures: Atmospheric cloud: PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 5 A comparison of scales between typical molecular and atmospheric clouds. Molecular Cloud Size 1014 km Mass 1036 gm Particle density 103 cm-3 Temperature 20 K Mol/atomic weight 2.3 Speed of sound 0.3 km/s Turbulent speed 3 km/s Dynamical time Million years Atmospheric Cloud 1 km 1011 gm 1019 cm-3 260 K 29 0.3 km/s 0.003 km/s Five minutes Scales & Types: Estimated properties of individual molecular aggregates in the Galaxy: Phase GMCs Mass (Msun) 6x104 - 2x106 Size (parsecs) 20 - 100 Density (cm-3) 100 - 300 Temperature (K) 15 - 40 Magn. Field(G) 1 - 10 Line width (km/s) 6 - 15 Dynamic life (years) 3 x 106 Clumps/Globules 102 0.2 - 4 103 - 104 7 - 15 3 - 30 0.5 - 4 106 Cores 1 - 10 0.1 - 0.4 104 - 105 10 10 - 50 0.2 - 0.4 6 x 105 Note: dynamical life defined as Size/(Line width), true lifetimes would be considerably longer if clouds were static. Example: Orion millimeter dust emission – clumps and cores PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 6 The Horsehead (optical – dark cloud) Summary: clouds are turbulent, possibly fractal 3. Molecular clouds: their origin Agglomeration: collisions and merging/coalescence of smaller clouds – not sufficient small clouds. Spiral arm density-wave focusing. Gravitational instability followed by fragmentation Condensation: out of atomic clouds. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 7 Accumulation: gas swept up into supershells, focused in turbulent interstellar medium. Answer: combination of these. 4. Molecular cloud evolution PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 8 Observed: Giants, clumps, cores, eggs Gravitational Collapse: When a fragment of a molecular cloud reaches a critical mass – the Jeans mass (after Sir James Jeanss (1877-1946) - it collapses to form a star. Gas and dust are then pulled together by gravity until a star is formed. Balance forces: gravity and pressure: GMJ2/R ~ MJcs2 PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 9 Eliminate R in favour of the density, yields the Jeans Mass, which more precisely calculated is MJ 6 G 3/ 2 c s3 1 / 2 Fragmentation: The molecular cloud does not collapse into a single star. It fragments [through the Jeans instability - into many clumps. As the density rises, the Jeans mass falls. This means the cloud continues to fragment into smaller clumps. What makes it reach/exceed the critical mass? Mechanisms: sequential, spontaneous, turbulence, triggers What are the conditions that favour the initiation of star formation? Decrease internal pressure: By decreasing the temperature or the density or both Increasing the mean mass per particle by transforming from an atomic gas to a molecular gas. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 10 Decrease the ionization fraction, fe = ne/n to < 10-7 => gas decouples from any magnetic field present so that magnetic pressure cannot support the cloud. Increase the external pressure: By partially focused shocks. By ionization of the gas around a molecular clump: radiativelydriven implosion. Collapses Methods Collapse: Method 1 Accretion- coalescence: Build up of small clouds of gas and dust into clumps. Clumps "stick" together and grow. Very slow - due to low interstellar densities Collapse: Method 2 Gravity and Radiation Pressure Collapse: Method 3: sequential, triggered Compression by supernova blast waves Evidence that the Solar System/Sun was triggered by a supernova – PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 11 (radioactive isotopes so short-lived that they no longer exist were trapped in chondrules within meteorites). PH507 The Difficult Path to Collapse Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 12 Gravity makes parts of a the cloud collapse. Hindrances to collapse which favour expansion: 1. Internal heating Causes pressure build-up 2. Angular momentum Causes high rotation speeds (exemplified by a figure skater) 3. Magnetic support Internal Heating Cloud fragments collapse Potential energy => Kinetic Energy o Gas particles speed up and collide. The temperature increases. This causes a pressure build-up which slows (or stops) the collapse. Solution: Energy is radiated away. PH507 Angular Momentum Astrophysics 13 Angular momentum o A = mass x vel. of rotation x radius o A=mvr Conservation of angular momentum. o Magnetic support Professor Michael Smith A = constant for a closed system. As the cloud fragment shrinks due to gravity, it spins faster. Collapse occurs preferentially along path of least rotation. The cloud fragment collapses into a central core surrounded by a disk of material. Further collapse: magnetic braking – winding and twisting of magnetic field lines connected to external gas. There is a critical mass, for which gravity is held up by magnetic pressure. A cloud can be super-critical – free to collapse The field diffuses out: ambipolar diffusion – since the magnetic field is only tied to the ions, and the ions slip through the molecules. The Final Collapse: approaching birth Final adjustments. The thermodynamics now take on supreme importance. Much of what occurs is still theory: Stage 1. The density shields the core from external radiation, allowing the temperature to drop slightly. Dust grains provide efficient cooling. The hydrogen is molecular. Stage 2. An isothermal collapse all the way from densities of 10 4 cm-3 then proceeds. The gravitational energy released goes via compression into heating the molecules. The energy is rapidly passed on to the dust grains via collisions. The dust grains re-radiate the energy in the millimeter range, which escapes PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 14 the core. So long as the radiation can escape, the collapse remains unhindered. Stage 3. At densities of 1011 cm-3 and within a radius of 1014 cm the gas becomes opaque to the dust radiation even at 300microns. The energy released is trapped and the temperature rises. As the temperature ascends, the opacity also ascends. The core suddenly switches from isothermal to adiabatic. Stage 4. The high thermal pressure resists gravity and this ends the first collapse, forming what is traditionally called the first core at a density of 1013 cm-3 - 1014 cm-3 and temperature of 100-200 K. Stage 5. A shock wave forms at the outer edge of the first core. The first core accretes from the envelope through this shock. The temperature continues to rise until the density reaches 1017 cm-3. Stage 6. The temperature reaches 2000 K. Hydrogen molecules dissociate at such a high temperature if held sufficiently long. The resulting atoms hold less energy than the molecules did (the dissociation is endothermic), tempering the pressure rise. The consequence is the second collapse. Stage 7. The molecules become exhausted and the cooling stops at the centre of the first core. Protostellar densities of order 1023 cm-3 are reachedand with temperatures of 10,000 K, thermal pressure brakes the collapse. This brings a second and final protostellar core into existence. The mass of this core may only be one per cent of the final stellar mass. Stage 8. The first shock from Stage 5 disappears while a second inner shock now mediates the accretion onto the protostellar core. A star is born. Further Collapse with Angular Momentum into a Disk All astronomical objects spin, even if very slowly. The original collapsing cloud will have some small amount of spin. During a collapse, angular momentum is conserved. Angular momentum is J = a x W R2 o a = a constant whose value we aren't interested in o W = Angular velocity = 2 pi/P o P = Spin Period o R = Radius of the star cloud If angular momentum is conserved then Wfinal = W0 x (R0/Rfinal)2 Since R0/Rfinal is much larger than 1 Final angular velocity can be very high, even if the initial angular velocity is very low. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith Centrifugal force and gravity approach equilibrium A very rapidly rotating cloud will get flattened into a disk. This disk can then fragment into protoplanets. 15 Disk Formation Planet Formation The disk around the central core will fragment further, producing rings of material. The particles in these rings can accrete together to form planetesimals and planets! PH507 Making the Stars Visible Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 16 Making the Stars Visible After a star is born it heats the gas and dust around it. Jets of gas are ejected: bipolar outflows are observed. Eventually the gas and dust are accreted or dispersed. The star is then "visible." Prior to this it could be seen only in the radio and the infrared. Spectral energy distributions define the classes of protostars and Young Stellar Objects…… PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 17 PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 18 Young Stars: accretion, contraction, jets and outflow Accretion through disc: bolometric luminosity of protostar is . L GM M R Where M*dot* is the mass accretion rate and GM/R is the energy released per unit mass onto the protostar of (accumulating) mass M and radius R. Star accumulates gas from envelope through the disc, releases some through jets back into cloud. The jets are thought to be the channels for the extraction of angular momentum. Jets: extend parsecs from source. They are seen through their impact with cloud: shock wave heating: Herbig-Haro Objects. They create large reservoirs of outpouring and swept-up gas: bipolar outflows or molecules outflows HH46/47: Optical: HST PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 19 Infrared: Spitzer Massive Stars & Clusters: Massive stars should not form: hydrogen burning begins while accreting: radiation pressure should resist the infall. Produce hot molecular cores, masers, compact/extended H II regions. Accretion must be high and through a disk: suffocate the feedback. Most stars are in multiple bound systems. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 20 Frequency of occurrence: single:binary:triple:quadruple is 58:33:7:1 Theory: capture, fission, core/collapse/disk fragmentation Capture: unlikely Fission: leads only to close binaries Fragmentation plausible. 90% of stars are born in clusters. Cluster: over 35 stars, at least 1 Msun/pc3 Embedded clusters: 1000 Msun with a density 10,000 Msun/pc3 Segregation: Massive stars tend to form in centre (form in situ, don’t migrate) Relaxation: Cloud evolves and cluster disperses in a few million years. Clusters dissolve: most stars are NOT in clusters, they become field stars. All suggests: Hierarchical fragmentation within a turbulent medium . Star formation efficiency, the amount of cloud gas transformed into stars, is 3%20%. The mass function (the IMF: initial mass function): most star are of low mass. Questions: Power law? Scale-free hierarchy. Is there a brown dwarf desert? Planets form in disks, stars in collapse. PH507 Astrophysics Turbulence v. Gravity Professor Michael Smith 21 PH507 Astrophysics Proplyds – protoplanetary disks: Professor Michael Smith 22 PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 23 Debris Disks Debris disks are remnant accretion disks with little or no gas left (just dust & rocks), outflow has stopped, the star is visible. Theory: Gas disperses, “planetesimals” form (100 km diameter rocks), collide & stick together due to gravity forming protoplanets). Protoplanets interact with dust disks: tidal torques cause planets to migrate inward toward their host stars. Estimated migration time ~ 2 x 105 yrs for Earth-size planet at 5 AU. Perturbations caused by gas giants may spawn smaller planets: Start with a stable disk around central star. Jupiter-sized planet forms & clears gap in gas disk. Planet accretes along spiral Disk fragments into more arms, arms become unstable. planetary mass objects. Spiral density waves continuously produced by the gravity of embedded or external perturber. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 24 Debris Disks – Outer Disk AB Aurigae outer debris disk nearly face on – see structure & condensations (possible protoplanet formation sites? Very far from star) . (Grady et al. 1999) Debris: not from original nebula but from recent collisions. The Birth of the Solar System The properties of the Solar System hold important clues to its origin Orbits of the planets and asteroids. Rotation of the planets and the Sun. Composition of the planets, especially the strong distinction between Terrestrial, Jovian, and Icy planets. Clues from planetary motions: Planets orbit in nearly the same plane. Planet orbits are nearly circular. Planets & Asteroids orbit in the same direction. Rotation axes of the planets tends to align with the sense of their orbits, with exceptions. Sun rotates in the same direction in the same sense. Jovian moon systems mimic the Solar System. Clues from planet composition: Inner Planets & Asteroids: Small rocky bodies Few ices or volatiles PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 25 Jovian Planets: Deep Hydrogen & Helium atmospheres rich in volatiles. Large ice & rock cores Outer solar system moons & icy bodies: Small ice & rock mixtures with frozen volatiles. Formation of the Sun: back to the Primordial Solar Nebula Stars form out of interstellar gas clouds: Large cold cloud of H2 molecules and dust gravitationally collapses and fragments. Rotating fragments collapse further: Rapid collapse along the poles, but centrifugal forces slow the collapse along the equator. Result is collapse into a spinning disk Central core collapses into a rotating proto-Sun surrounded by a rotating "Solar Nebula" Primordial Solar Nebula The rotating solar nebula is composed of ~75% Hydrogen & 25% Helium Traces of metals and dust grains Starts out at ~2000 K, then cools: As it cools, various elements condense out of the gas into solid form as grains or ices. Which materials condense out when depends on their "condensation temperature". Condensation Temperatures Temp (K) Elements >2000 K 1600 K Condensate All elements are gaseous Al, Ti, Ca Mineral Oxides PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 26 1400 K Iron & Nickel Metallic Grains – Refractory, Rocky 1300 K Silicon Silicate Grains - Rocky 300 K Carbon, Oxygen Carbonaceous grains -Volatiles 300-100 K Hydrogen, Nitrogen Ices (H2O, CO2, NH3, CH4) The "Frost Line" Rock & Metals can form anywhere it is cooler than about 1300 K. Carbon grains & ices can only form where the gas is cooler than 300 K. Inner Solar System: Too hot for ices & carbon grains. Outer Solar System: Carbon grains & ices form beyond the "frost line". The location of the "frost line" is also a matter of some debate, but current thinking holds that it is probably about 4 AU . A great deal depends on how much solar radiation can penetrate deep into the outer parts of the primordial Solar Nebula. From Grains to Planetesimals to Planets Grains that have low-velocity collisions can stick together, forming bigger grains. Beyond the "frost line", get additional growth by condensing ices onto the grains. Grow to where their mutual gravitation assists in the aggregation process, accelerating the growth rate. Can form km-sized planetesimals after a few 1000 years of initial growth. Aggregation of planetesimals into planets Terrestrial vs. Jovian planet formation. Terrestrial Planets Only rocky planetesimals inside the frost line: Collisions between planetesimals form small rocky bodies. It is hotter closer to the Sun, so the proto-planets cannot capture H and He gas. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 27 Solar wind is also dispersing the solar nebula from the inside out, removing H & He. Result: Form rocky terrestrial planets with few ices. Jovian Planets The addition of ices to the mix greatly augments the masses of the planetesimals These collide to form large rock and ice cores:. Jupiter & Saturn: 10-15 MEarth rock/ice cores. Uranus & Neptune: 1-2 MEarth rock/ice cores. As a consequence of their larger masses & colder temperatures: Can accrete H & He gas from the solar nebula. Planets with the biggest cores grow rapidly in size, increasing the amount of gas accretion. Result: Form large Jovian planets with massive rock & ice cores and heavy H and He atmospheres Moons & Asteroids Some of the gas attracted to the proto-Jovians forms a rotating disk of material: Get mini solar nebula around the Jovians Rocky/icy moons form in these disks. Later moons added by asteroid/comet capture. Asteroids: Gravity of the proto-Jupiter keeps the planetesimals in the main belt stirred up. Never get to aggregate into a larger bodies. Icy Bodies & Comets Outer reaches are the coldest, but also the thinnest parts of the Solar Nebula: Ices condense very quickly onto rocky cores. Stay small because of a lack of material. Gravity of the proto-Neptune also plays a role: PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 28 Assisted the formation of Pluto-sized bodies in 3:2 resonance orbits (Pluto and Plutinos) Disperses the rest into the Kuiper Belt to become Kuiper Belt Objects. Comets and other Trans-Neptunian objects are the leftover icy planetesimals from the formation of the Solar System. Mopping up... The entire planetary assembly process probably took about 100 Million years. Followed by a 1 Billion year period during which the planets were subjected to heavy bombardment by the remaining rocky & icy pieces leftover from planet formation. Light from the Sun dispersed the remaining gas in the Solar Nebula gas into the interstellar medium. Planetary motions reflect the history of their formation. Planets share the same sense of rotation, but have been perturbed from perfect alignment by strong collisions during formation. The Sun "remembers" this original rotation. Rotates in the same direction with its axis aligned with the plane of the Solar System. Planetary compositions reflect the formation conditions. Terrestrial planets are rock & metal: They formed in the hot inner regions of the Solar Nebula. Too hot to capture Hydrogen/Helium gas from the Solar Nebula. Jovian planets contain ice, H & He: They formed in the cool outer regions of the Solar Nebula. Grew large enough to accrete lots of H & He. . Two obvious differences between the exoplanets and the giant planets in the Solar System: • Existence of planets at small orbital radii, where our previous theory suggested formation was very difficult. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 29 • Substantial eccentricity of many of the orbits. No clear answers to either of these surprises, but lots of ideas... It is very difficult to form planets close to the stars in a standard theory of planet formation using minimum mass solar nebula, because it's too hot there for grain condensation, or there's too little solid material in the vicinity to built protoplanet's core of 10 ME (applies to r~1 AU as well). problematic to build it quickly enough (< 3 Myr) there's too little gas to build a massive envelope Most conservative (accepted) possibility: • Planet formation in these extrasolar systems was via the core accretion model – i.e. same as dominant theory for the Solar System • Subsequent orbital evolution modified the planet orbits to make them closer to the star and / or more eccentric We will focus on this option. However, more radical options in which exoplanets form directly from gravitational instability are also possible. Settling and growth of dust grains: well-coupled to gas, rapid only if turbulent? Pebbles to planetesimals (km size): inward drift due to gas drag. Gas orbits slightly slower than Keplerian, so must grow quickly to avoid spiraling in. Twobody collisions, rather than accretion? PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 30 Planetesimal to rocky planet/gas-giant core: independent of gas, slow – gravitational dynamics (gravity increase the collision cross-section). Gas accretion onto core, grav. Torques - migration Orbital evolution – migration Giant planets can form at large orbital radii. Need a migration mechanism that can move giant planets from formation at ~5 AU to a range of radii from 0.04 AU upwards. Three theories have been proposed: • Gas disc migration: planet forms within a protoplanetary disc and is swept inwards with the gas as the disc evolves and material accretes onto the star. The most popular theory, as by definition gas must have been present when gas giants form. • Planetesimal disc migration: as above, but planet interacts with a disc of rocks rather than gas. Planet ejects the rocks, loses energy, and moves inwards. • Planet scattering: several massive planets form – subsequent chaotic orbital interactions lead to some (most) being ejected with the survivors moving inwards as above. Gas disc migration Planet interacts with gas in the disc via gravitational force. Strong interactions at resonances, e.g. where disc = nplanet, with n an integer. For example the 2:1 resonance, where n = 2, which lies at 2-2/3 rp = 0.63 rp Resonances at r < rp: Disc gas has greater angular velocity than planet. Loses angular momentum to planet -> moves inwards Resonances at r > rp: Disc gas has smaller angular velocity than planet. Gains angular momentum from planet -> moves outwards. PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 31 Migration type I - no gap If the object has too small a mass to open a gap, it will drift inwards. The analysis of Type I migration relies on the (near) exact cancelling of the various torques It is thought that the intrinsic imbalance of torques from the inner and outer disk determines this. It is very rapid, and may shift the protoplanetary core to arbitrarily small distance from the star in the allotted ~3 Myr time frame. Migration type II - inside an open gap Interaction tends to clear gas away from location of planet. Result: planet orbits in a gap largely cleared of gas and dust. Tidal locking of the planet in the gap. The planet, unless more massive than the surrounding disk, follows the disk's viscous flow. This process occurs for massive planets (~ Jupiter mass) only. Earth mass planets remain embedded in the gas though gravitational torques can be very important source of orbital evolution for them too. How does this lead to migration? PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 32 1. Angular momentum transport in the gas (viscosity) tries to close the gap (diffusive evolution of an accretion disc). 2. Gravitational torques from planet try to open gap wider. 3. Gap edge set by a balance: -> Internal viscous torque = planetary torque 4. Planet acts as a angular momentum ‘bridge’: • Inside gap, outward angular momentum flux transported by viscosity within disc • At gap edge, flux transferred to planet via gravitational torques, then outward again to outer disc • Outside gap, viscosity again operative Typically, gap extends to around the 2:1 resonances interior and exterior to the planet’s orbit. As disc evolves, planet moves within gap like a fluid element in the disc – i.e. usually inwards. Inward migration time ~ few x 105 yr from 5 AU. Mechanism can bring planets in to the hot Jupiter regime. This mechanism is quantitatively consistent with the distribution of exoplanets at different orbital radii – though the error bars are still very large! Eccentricity generation mechanisms Substantial eccentricities of many exoplanets orbits do not have completely satisfactory explanation. The theories can be divided into groups corresponding to different formation mechanisms: (A) Direct molecular cloud fragmentation (B) Protostellar disk fragmentation theories (C) Companion star-planet interaction (in double star like 16 Cyg) PH507 Astrophysics Professor Michael Smith 33 (D) Classical giant planet formation w/planet-planet interaction (E) Resonant disk-planet interaction (D) Scattering among several massive planets Assumption: planet formation often produces a multiple system which is unstable over long timescales: • Chaotic evolution of a, e (especially e) • Orbit crossing • Eventual close encounters -> ejections • Eccentricity for survivors Advantages: • Given enough planets, close together, definitely works • Can produce very eccentric planets cf e=0.92 example discovered • Some (stable) multiple systems are already known Disadvantages: • Requires planets to form very close together. Is it plausible that unstable systems formed in a large fraction of extrasolar planetary systems? • Collisions may produce too many low e systems (E) Disc interactions Assumption: gravitational interaction with disc generates eccentricity Advantages: • Same mechanism as invoked for migration • Works for just one planet • Theoretically, interaction is expected to increase eccentricity if dominated by 3:1 resonance Disadvantages: • Gap is only expected to reach the 3:1 resonance for brown dwarf type masses, not massive planets. Smaller gaps definitely tend to circularize the orbit instead. • Seems unlikely to give very large eccentricities (3) Protoplanetary disc itself is eccentric Assumption: why should discs have circular orbits anyway? Eccentric disc -> eccentric planet? Not yet explored in much depth. A possibility, though again seems unlikely to lead to extreme eccentricities. Scattering theory is currently most popular, possibly augmented by interactions with other planets in resonant orbits. THE END