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Lecture L11 ASTC25 1. Discovery and study of dusty disks in Vega-type systems 2. Evidence of planetesimals and planets in the Beta Pictoris system 3. Replenished dust disks: collisions and nature of dust Discovery and study of dusty disks: Scattered light tells us how the scattering area is distributed around the star and how reflective particles are Thermal radiation measurements and images (at wavelengths of 10 microns and larger) tell us how the absorbing and emitting area of particles is distributed around the star and how hot particles are. Neither the optical nor the mid-infrared images/data alone allow us to separate the contributions of the area and the emissivity (scattering/emission coefficient). Albedo (percentage of light scattered) can only be found by comparing observations done in the visible and mid-infrared (or far-IR) spectral domains. Infrared excess stars (Vega phenomenon) Beta Pictoris thermal radiation imaging (10 um) Lagage & Pantin (1993) 1984 1993 Beta Pictoris, visible scattered starlight comparison with IR data yields a high albedo, A~0.4-0.5 (like Saturn’s rings but very much unlike the black particles of cometary crust or Uranus’ rings). This is how disks look when just discovered A new edgeon disk! NICMOS/ HST (Schneider et al 2005) near-IR band (scattered light) This is how disks look a decade later - much better quality data, fewer artifacts, disks appear smoother. Disk of Alpha Pisces Austrini (a PsA) = Fomalhaut a bright southern star type A HD 141569A is a Herbig emission star >2 x solar mass, >10 x solar luminosity, hydrogen emission lines H are double, because they come from a rotating inner gas disk. CO gas has also been found at r = 90 AU. Observations by Hubble Space Telescope (NICMOS near-IR camera). Age ~ 5 Myr, a transitional disk Gap-opening PLANET ? So far out?? R_gap ~350AU dR ~ 0.1 R_gap HD 14169A disk gap confirmed by new observations (HST/ACS) Evidence of planetesimals and planets in the vicinity of beta Pictoris: 1. Lack of dust near the star (r<30AU) 2. Spectroscopy => Falling Evaporating Bodies 3. Something large (a planet) needed to perturb FEBs so they approach the star gradually. 4. The disk is warped somewhat, like a rim of cowboy hat, and that requires the gravitational pull of a planet on an orbit inclined by a few degrees to the plane of the disk. 5. Large reservoir of parent (unseen) bodies of dust needed, of order 100 Earth masses of rock/ice. Otherwise the dust would disappear quickly, on collisional time scale B Pic b(?) sky? Beta Pictoris Evidence of large bodies (planetesimals, comets?) 11 micron image analysis converting observed flux to dust area (Lagage & Pantin 1994) FEB = Falling Evaporating Bodies hypothesis in Beta Pictoris FEB star H & K calcium absorption lines are located in the center of a stellar rotation-broadened line absorption line(s) that move on the time scale of days as the FEBs cross the line of sight 1. Temperature of solid particles around a star 2. Finding out the dust distribution (optical thickness) 3. Radiation pressure - size distribution of particles - elliptic orbits of stable particles 4. Collisional lifetime ~ orbital period / optical thickness 5. Composition and crystallinity of particles Calculating the temperature of dust & larger bodies The physics of dust and radiation is very simple In the past the amount of dust hidden by coronograph mask had to be reconstructed using MEM= maximum entropy method or other models. Today scattered light data often suffice. tau = optical thickness perpendicular to the disk (vertical optical thicknass) Equilibrium temperature of solid particles (from dust to atmosphereless planets) A = Qsca = albedo (percentage of light scattered) Qabs = absorption coefficient, percentage of light absorbed Qabs + Qsca = 1 (this assumes the size of the body >> wavelength of starlight, otherwise the sum, called extinction coefficient Qext, might be different) total absorbing area = A, total emitting area = 4 A (spherical particle) Absorbed energy/unit time = Emitted energy /unit time A Qabs(vis) L/(4 pi r^2) = 4A Qabs(IR) sigma T^4 L = stellar luminosity, r = distance to star, L/4pi r^2 = flux of energy, T = equilibrium temperature of the whole particle, e.g., dust grain, sigma = Stefan-Boltzmann constant (see physical constanys table) sigma T^4 = energy emitted from unit area of a black body in unit time Qabs(vis) - in the visible/UV range where starlight is emitted/absorbed Qabs(IR) - emissivity=absorptivity (Kirchhoffs law!) in the infared, where thermal radiation is emitted Equilibrium temperature of solid bodies falls with the square-root of r T^4 = [Qabs(vis)/ Qabs(IR)] L/(16 pi r^2 sigma) which can be re-written using Qabs(vis) = 1-A as T = 280 K [(1-A)/Qabs(IR) (L/Lsun)]^(1/4) (r/AU)^(-1/2) Table of theoretical surface temperature T of planets if Qabs(IR)=1, and the actual surface temperature Tp. Differences between the two mostly due to greenhouse effect Body Albedo A T(K) Tp(K) comments _________________________________________________________ Mercury 0.15 433 433 Venus 0.72 240 540 huge greenhouse Earth 0.45 235 280 greenhouse Moon 0.15 270 270 Mars 0.25 210 220 weak greenhouse asteroid (typical) 0.15 160 160 Ganimede 0.3 112 112 Titan 0.2 86 90(?) Pluto 0.5 38 38 Optical thickness: (r ) eq ( r ) perpendicular to the disk in the equatorial plane (percentage of starlight scattered and absorbed, as seen by the outside observer looking at the disk edge-on, aproximately like we look through the beta Pictoris disk) What is the optical thickness (r ) ? It is the fraction of the disk surface covered by dust: here I this example it’s about 2e-1 (20%) - the disk is optically thin ( = transparent, since it blocks only 20% of light) picture of a small portion of the disk seen from above Examples: beta Pic disk at r=100 AU opt.thickness~3e-3 disk around Vega opt.thickness~1e-4 zodiacal light disk (IDPs) solar system ~1e-7 STIS/Hubble imaging (Heap et al 2000) Modeling (Artymowicz,unpubl.): parametric, axisymmetric disk cometary dust phase function Vertical optical thickness Radius r [AU] Vertical profile of dust density Height z [AU] Dust processing: collisions 1. Collisional time formula 2. The analogy with the early solar system (in the region of today’s TNOs = trans-Neptunian objects, or in other words, Kuiper belt objects, KBOs; these are asteroid-sized bodies up to several hundred km radius) t coll Time between collisions (collisional lifetime) of a typical alpha meteoroid. Obviously, inversely proportional to the optical thickness (doubling the optical depth results in 2-times shorter particle lifetime, because the rate of collision doubles). t coll P /(8 ) P = orbital period, depends on radius as in Kepler’s III law. This formula is written with a numerical coefficient of 1/8, to reflect the fact that a disk made of equal-sized particles needs to have the optical thickness of about 1/4 to make every particle traversing it vertically collide with some disk particle, on average. The vertical piercing of the disk is done every one-half period, because particles are on inclined orbits and do indeed cross the disk nearly vertically, if on circular orbits. If the orbits are elliptic, a better approximate formula has a coefficient of 12 replacing 8 in the above equation. How does the Vega-phenomenon relate to our Solar System (Kuiper belt, or TNOs - transneptunian objects) Chemistry/mineralogy/crystallinity of dust all we see so far is silicate particles similar to the IDPs (interplanetary dust particles from our system) ice particles are not seen, at least not in the dust size range (that is also true of the IDPs) Microstructure of circumstellar disks: identical with IDPs (interplanetary dust particles) mostly Fe+Mg silicates (Mg,Fe)SiO3 (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 Small dust is observed due to its large total area Parent bodies like these (asteroids, comets) are the ultimate sources of the dust, but remain invisible in images due to their small combined area Comet A rock is a rock is a rock… which one is from the Earth? Mars? Beta Pic? It’s hard to tell from just spectroscopy or even looking at it! EQUILIBRIUM COOLING SEQUENCE Chemical unity of nature… and it’s thanks to stellar nucleosynthesis! T(K) What minerals will precipitate from a solar-composition, cooling gas? Mainly Mg/Fe-rich silicates and water ice. Planets are made of precisely these things. Silicates silicates ices The disk particles are made of the Earth-type minerals! (olivine, pyroxene, FeO, PAH= Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons) Crystallinity of minerals Recently, for the first time observations showed the difference in the degree of crystallinity of minerals in the inner vs. the outer disk parts. This was done by comparing IR spectra obtained with single dish telescopes with those obtained while combining several such telescopes into an interferometric array (this technique, long practiced by radio astronomers, allows us to achieve very good, low-angular resolution, observations). In the following 2 slides, you will see some “inner” and “outer” disk spectra - notice the differences, telling us about the different structure of materials: amorphous silicates = typical dust grains precipitating from gas, for instance in the interstellar medium, no regular crystal structure crystalline grains= same chemical composition, but forming a regular crystal structure, thought to be derived from amorphous grains by some heating (annealing) effect at temperatures up to ~1000 K. ~90% amorphous compare ~60% amorphous ~45% amorphous Beta Pic, ~95% crystalline