LPL Colloquium: Dr. Kathryn Volk

When

3:45 p.m., Sept. 15, 2015

Where

Dr. Kathryn Volk
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Lunar and Planetary Laboratory
University of Arizona

Consolidating and Crushing Exoplanets: Did It Happen Here?

The Kepler mission results indicate that systems of tightly packed inner planets (STIPs) are present around of order 5% of FGK field stars (whose median age is about 5 Gyr). We propose that STIPs initially surrounded nearly all such stars, and those observed are the final survivors of a process in which long-term metastability eventually ceases and the systems proceed to collisional consolidation or destruction, losing roughly equal fractions of systems every decade in time. In this context, we also propose that our solar system initially contained additional large planets interior to the current orbit of Venus, which survived in a metastable dynamical configuration for 1%–10% of the solar system’s age. Long-term gravitational perturbations caused the system orbits to cross, leading to a cataclysmic event that left Mercury as the sole surviving relic. (See the recently published paper here: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2015ApJ...806L..26V)