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Using the Inner Oort Cloud to Explore the History of the Earth and Sun Nathan Kaib Advisor: Tom Quinn Collaborators: Andrew Becker, Lynne Jones University.

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Presentation on theme: "Using the Inner Oort Cloud to Explore the History of the Earth and Sun Nathan Kaib Advisor: Tom Quinn Collaborators: Andrew Becker, Lynne Jones University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Using the Inner Oort Cloud to Explore the History of the Earth and Sun Nathan Kaib Advisor: Tom Quinn Collaborators: Andrew Becker, Lynne Jones University of Washington

2 Outline Background Outer Solar System primer Inner vs. outer Oort Cloud Observations Candidate inner Oort Cloud objects Prospects from future surveys What We Can Learn Oort Cloud formation and the Sun’s birth environment Comet showers and mass extinctions

3 Outline Background Outer Solar System primer Inner vs. outer Oort Cloud Observations Candidate inner Oort Cloud objects Prospects from future surveys What We Can Learn Oort Cloud formation and the Sun’s birth environment Comet showers and mass extinctions

4 Classical Kuiper Belt (pre ~1995) Leftover primordial disk Low inclination Low eccentricity

5 Scattered Disk Objects that have had Neptune encounter Inclinations inflated - ( 0 – ~20 o ) Higher eccentricities - (0.1 – ~1) Source of short- period comets

6 Outer Solar System Oort Cloud extends to ~200,000 AU (1 pc)

7 Source of Long-Period Comets

8 Long-Period Comets

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10 The tide of the Milky Way also perturbs the Oort Cloud (COBE, NASA)

11 Galactic tide causes perihelion and inclination to oscillateAbout 2x as powerful as stellar passages (Heisler & Tremaine 1986)

12 Outline Background Outer Solar System primer Inner vs. outer Oort Cloud Observations Candidate inner Oort Cloud objects Prospects from future surveys What We Can Learn Oort Cloud formation and the Sun’s birth environment Comet showers and mass extinctions

13 X

14 Jupiter-Saturn Barrier Comets must have large perihelion shift to make it past Jupiter/Saturn in one orbital period Only weakly bound comets will have large perihelion changes Jupiter/Saturn shield inner solar system from inner 20,000 AU of Oort Cloud 25000 AU

15 LPCs near Earth only constrain outer Oort Cloud LPCs beyond Saturn will sample inner Oort Cloud as well LPCs and Oort Cloud a > 20,000 AU a > 1,000 AU ~

16 Outline Background Outer Solar System primer Inner vs. outer Oort Cloud Observations Candidate inner Oort Cloud objects Prospects from future surveys What We Can Learn Oort Cloud formation and the Sun’s birth environment Comet showers and mass extinctions

17 SDSS-II SN Survey Observations 2006 SQ 372

18 SDSS-II SN Survey Observations 2006 SQ 372

19 SDSS-II SN Survey Observations 2006 SQ 372

20 SDSS-II SN Survey Observations 2006 SQ 372

21 Orbit Summary a = 796 AUq = 24.2 AUi = 19.5°

22 Orbital Evolution Current orbit is transient - unstable after ~200 Myrs!

23 Two Different Origin Scenarios 1. Scattered Disk semimajor axis perihelion x

24 Two Different Origin Scenarios 2. Oort Cloud semimajor axis perihelion x OC SD

25 Simulations Scattered Disk 2,500 particles Orbit distributions based on SDO observations Run for 4.5 Gyrs Oort Cloud 10 6 particles Orbit distributions based on Kaib & Quinn (2008) sims Run for 1.4 Gyrs Non-symplectic variable timestep integrator based on SWIFT (Levison & Duncan, 1994; Kaib & Quinn, 2008)

26 Results – OC Sim. (10° < i < 30°)

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31 Orbital Residence Map (OC) X 2006 SQ 372 10° < i < 30°

32 Calibrating Simulation Output For scattered disk simulation, assume: - N JFCs = 250 - Dormant:Active Comet ratio = 2 (Morbidelli & Fernandez, 2006) For Oort Cloud simulation, assume: - LPC flux (q < 5 AU) = 1.5 comets/yr (Neslusan, 2007) - Inner:Outer OC population ratio = 3 (Kaib & Quinn, 2008)

33 Orbital Residence Map (OC) X 2006 SQ 372 10° < i < 30°

34 P OC /P SD Map SQ 372 For 2006 SQ 372 : P OC /P SD  16 2006 SQ 372 2000 OO 67 (Kaib et al., 2009)

35 Origin Implications 2006 SQ 372 is at least 16 times more likely to come from the Oort Cloud compared to the Scattered Disk Which region of the Oort Cloud?

36 Inner Oort Cloud Origin Semimajor axis drawdown time vs. Perihelion drift time  q = -10 AU  Ejection by Saturn  q = 10 AU  a is fixed

37 Inner Oort Cloud Origin t q ~ a -2 t a ~ 100 Myrs Sampled by Known LPCs (~2.5%) a < 800 AU 20 AU < q < 30 AU (Kaib et al., 2009)

38 2006 SQ 372 Summary 2006 SQ 372 and 2000 OO 67 (Elliot et al. 2005) are first detected members of inner Oort Cloud population inside planetary region Pan-STARRS, LSST will discover 100’s to 1000’s of similar bodies Population statistics will constrain structure and population size of inner Oort Cloud

39 Outline Background Outer Solar System primer Inner vs. outer Oort Cloud Observations Candidate inner Oort Cloud objects Prospects from future surveys What We Can Learn Oort Cloud formation and the Sun’s birth environment Comet showers and mass extinctions

40 How did the Oort Cloud form? Pat Rawlings, NASA

41 q is ~fixed, but a undergoes random walk Planetesimal Scattering

42 If q > 40 AU then growth in a stops ~ 10 4 AU Inclination also changes

43 Semimajor axis (AU) Perihelion (AU) (Kaib & Quinn, 2008) t = 2 Gyrs

44 Semimajor axis (AU) Perihelion (AU) (Kaib & Quinn, 2008) x x x x t = 2 Gyrs LPCs SD KB OC Sedna 2000 CR 105 Buffy 2004 VN 112

45 Extended Scattered Disk ~ 10 3 AU If q was always big, orbit should be circular, low i a is too small for current external forces to shift q

46 Early Strong Perturbations Embedded Cluster Environment (Brasser et al., 2006) Open Cluster Environment (Kaib & Quinn, 2008)

47 Reproducing ESDOs Median OC Distance (AU) med min Kaib & Quinn (2008) Brasser et al. (2006)

48 Birthplace Consequences Kaib & Quinn (2008) Inner OC: a < 20,000 AU Outer OC:a > 20,000 AU Sun’s birth environment controls inner Oort Cloud enrichment and radial distribution

49 Outline Background Outer Solar System primer Inner vs. outer Oort Cloud Observations Candidate inner Oort Cloud objects Prospects from future surveys What We Can Learn Oort Cloud formation and the Sun’s birth environment Comet showers and mass extinctions

50 Comet Showers 25000 AU Rare close stellar encounters (< 5000 AU) are able to perturb more tightly bound orbits The Earth is temporarily exposed to the entire Oort Cloud

51 M * = M Sun v  = 20 km/s, D min = 3000 AU  t = 10 5 yrs 25,000 AU4 AU

52 Quantifying Shower Strength LPC defined as q < 5 AU M * = 0.8 M Sun v  = 20 km/s D min = 1300 AU

53 v  = 20 km/s Simulation Results Relative Shower Strength

54 Use impulse approximation to calculate  v Sun for each stellar passage:  v Sun = (2GM * )/(bv  )

55 One parameter controls shower strength Relative Shower Strength

56 Finding Shower Frequency Use Rickman et al. (2008) stellar encounter code to generate ~10 6 passages Find dN(  v Sun )/dt

57 One parameter controls shower strength Relative Shower Strength

58 1/  ~ (  v Sun ) -2 Relative Shower Strength

59 Regions Sampled by LPCs

60 Effects of Solar Formation Setting Inner Oort Cloud population very sensitive to formation environment of Sun (Fernadez & Brunini, 2000; Brasser et al., 2006; Kaib & Quinn, 2008)

61 Summary Inner Oort Cloud objects should be abundant beyond 10-15 AU First few objects have been discovered LSST and Pan-STARRS will discover 100’s to 1000’s and constrain inner OC This will reveal clues about the Sun’s birthplace Indicate if comet showers are source of mass extinctions

62 Divide LPC distribution by Oort Cloud distribution  Probability of LPC as a function of a

63 semimajor axis (AU) perihelion (AU) Random walk In a Random walk In q Duncan et al. (1987) 30 300 3000 1000 100 16002500400063001600010000


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