Only 20 years after the first exoplanet was spotted, astronomers are beginning to learn how planets form. Thousands of planets are now in the database, and scientists continue to improve their ability to analyze them for life-supporting characteristics. One aim of ALMA in Chile, the world’s largest radio telescope, is to study protoplanetary systems. Their mechanics will help scientists understand how the planets like Earth formed.
The Rice-led team’s target star, nearly 400 light years away and best observed from the Southern hemisphere, is one of many known to have a large disk of dust and gas, Isella said. “Of the material that formed this disk, about 1% is dust particles and 99% is gas,” Isella said. “So if you only see the dust, you cannot tell if a ring was formed by a planet or another phenomenon. In order to distinguish and really tell if there are planets or not, you need to see what the gas is doing, and in this study, for the first time, we can see both the dust and the gas.”
The outer rings are 100 and 160 astronomical units from HD 163296. (1unit = distance from center of the sun to Earth.) That’s much farther from the star than previously thought possible for planet formation. The star is too far from Earth for direct observation of the planets, yet evidence from the new study shows they are likely to be there, clearing dust and gas from the outer rings much like orbiting asteroids called shepherd satellites clear space between the rings around Saturn.
The inner ring, 60 astronomical units from its star, showed a much greater concentration of the 3 CO isotopes measured relative to dust. “Theoreticians have proposed other phenomena that can form dark rings without planets,” Isella said. The researchers suspect one in particular: a lack of turbulence among non-ionized gas molecules in a magnetorotational instability “dead zone” that allows gas and dust to condense into a Saturn-like ring at the edge of the dark zone rather than a planet. The ring may also appear at the carbon monoxide frost line where the gas becomes cold enough to condense.
The results laid the foundation for a new round of observations just starting at ALMA. Isella’s initiative to study 20 stars with protoplanetary disks is one of two “large programs” (from 24 proposals) accepted by the telescope. “‘Large program’ means that you ask for a lot of telescope time, more than 50 hours,” Isella said. “The other one they accepted will look at the emissions from a galaxy at the beginning of the universe.Isella said the researchers will also return to HD 163296 to learn what other elements are in the disk and rings. Taking inventory will help them determine what kind of a planet might form from material that’s readily available. “If we know the chemistry of the material forming a planet, we can understand the chemistry of the planet,” he said. Proximity to the star is also important. Eg, water has to be far enough from a star to freeze around grains and allow them to aggregate.
There is a chance that systems like HD 163296 and HL Tauri, 2 of the first 3 (with TW Hydrae) observed by ALMA to show protoplanetary rings, are anomalies, he said. “Now the question is whether all the protoplanetary disks are like this. Do they all have this structure? There is the concern that this object and HL Tauri are freaks,” Isella said. Answers should come when the 20-star survey is completed. “We won’t begin to get the data until next September, but it will tell us a lot,” he said.
http://news.rice.edu/2016/12/12/rings-around-young-star-suggest-planet-formation-in-progress/sthash.etFsJRzd.dpuf
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