POSSIBLE CONSEQUENCES OF ABSENCE OF JUPITER IN PLANETARY SYSTEMS

被引:62
作者
WETHERILL, GW
机构
[1] Dept. of Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington, DC
关键词
D O I
10.1007/BF00984505
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
The formation of the gas giant planets Jupiter and Saturn probably required the growth of massive approximately 15 Earth-mass cores on a time scale shorter than the approximately 10(7) time scale for removal of nebular gas. Relatively minor variations in nebular parameters could preclude the growth of full-size gas giants even in systems in which the terrestrial planet region is similar to our own. Systems containing ''failed Jupiters,'' resembling Uranus and Neptune in their failure to capture much nebular gas, would be expected to contain more densely populated cometary source regions. They will also eject a smaller number of comets into interstellar space. If systems of this kind were the norm, observation of hyperbolic comets would be unexpected. Monte Carlo calculations of the orbital evolution of region of such systems (the Kuiper belt) indicate that throughout Earth history the cometary impact flux in their terrestrial planet regions would be approximately 1000 times greater than in our Solar System. It may be speculated that this could frustrate the evolution of organisms that observe and seek to understand their planetary system. For this reason our observation of these planets in our Solar System may tell us nothing about the probability of similar gas giants occurring in other planetary systems. This situation can be corrected by observation of an unbiased sample of planetary systems.
引用
收藏
页码:23 / 32
页数:10
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   ORIGIN OF METEORITES AS SMALL BODIES .2. MODEL [J].
ARNOLD, JR .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1965, 141 (04) :1536-&
[2]  
Barrow J. D., 1988, ANTHROPIC COSMOLOGIC
[3]  
CHAMBERLIN TC, 1905, FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEMS, P195
[4]   THE FORMATION AND EXTENT OF THE SOLAR-SYSTEM COMET CLOUD [J].
DUNCAN, M ;
QUINN, T ;
TREMAINE, S .
ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 1987, 94 (05) :1330-1338
[5]   THE ORIGIN OF SHORT-PERIOD COMETS [J].
DUNCAN, M ;
QUINN, T ;
TREMAINE, S .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1988, 328 (02) :L69-L73
[6]   ON THE TIME EVOLUTION OF THE COMETARY INFLUX IN THE REGION OF THE TERRESTRIAL PLANETS [J].
FERNANDEZ, JA ;
IP, WH .
ICARUS, 1983, 54 (03) :377-387
[7]   SOME DYNAMICAL ASPECTS OF THE ACCRETION OF URANUS AND NEPTUNE - THE EXCHANGE OF ORBITAL ANGULAR-MOMENTUM WITH PLANETESIMALS [J].
FERNANDEZ, JA ;
IP, WH .
ICARUS, 1984, 58 (01) :109-120
[8]  
HAYASHI C, 1977, PUBL ASTRON SOC JPN, V29, P163
[9]  
LASKAR J, 1992, UNPUB NATURE
[10]  
LEVISON HF, 1992, IN PRESS ASTROPHYS J