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Untitled Essay Research Paper BETA PICTORIS PLANETS

Untitled Essay, Research Paper


BETA PICTORIS: PLANETS? LIFE? OR WHAT?JARAASTRONOMY


The ultimate question is; Is there a possibility that life might exist on a planet in the


Beta Pictoris system? First, one must ask, Are there planets in the Beta Pictoris system?.


However, that question would be impossible to answer if one did not answer the most basic


questions first; Where do planets come from? and do the key elements and situations,


needed to form planets, exist in the Beta Pictoris system?.


To understand where planets come from, one has to first look at where the planets in our


solar system came from. Does or did our star, the sun, have a circumstellar disk around


it? the answer is believed to be yes.


Scientists believe that a newly formed star is immediately surrounded by a relatively


dense cloud of gas and dust. In 1965, A. Poveda stated, “That new stars are likely to


be obscured by this envelope of gas and dust (1).” In 1967, Davidson and Harwit


agreed with Poveda and then termed this occurrence, the “cocoon nebula” (1).


Other authors have referred to this occurrence as, a “placental nebula” (1),


noting that it sustains the growth of planetary bodies.


For a long time, even before there was the term cocoon nebula, planetary scientists knew


that a cocoon nebula had surrounded the sun, long ago, in order for our solar system to


form and take on their currents motions (1).


In 1755, a German, named Immanuel Kant, reasoned that “gravity would make circumsolar


cloud contract and that rotation would flatten it (1)." Thus, the cloud would assume


the general shape of a rotating disk, explaining the fact that the planets, in our solar


system, revolve in a disk-shaped distribution.


This idea, about the disk-shaped nebula that was formed around the early sun, came to be


known as the nebula hypothesis (1). Then, in 1796, a French mathematician named Laplace,


proposed that the rotating disk continued to cool and contract, forming planetary bodies


(1). Also, when investigating the evolution of stars, it was proposed “that a star


forms as a central condensation in an extended nebula… The outer part remains behind as


the cocoon nebula (1)”. During the same study it was also indicated that under


various conditions such as: rotation, turbulence, etc. the nucleus of the forming star may


divide into two or more bodies orbiting each other (1). This may be the explanation as to


why more than half of all star systems are binary or multiple, rather than singles stars,


like ours, the sun.


This same fragmentation may also form bodies too small to become stars. However, they


could form into large planets, about the same size as Jupiter (1).


In 1966, Low and Smith calculated that the dust must be orbiting the star at a distance of


many tens of astronomical units, in order for planets to from (1). Others have reasoned


that the cocoon nebula must contain silicate and/or ice particles (planet-forming


materials), in order for the presence of planetary bodies (1). Still others have concluded


that planets form during the early life of a star (1).


After determining that planets are formed in a circumstellar disk surrounding a star, we


must ask ourselves, Does Beta Pictoris have a cirumstellar disk around it?


Beta Pictoris was found to have a circumstellar disk in 1983. It was first detected by the


Infrared Astronomy Satellite. The disk is seen to extend to more than 400 astronomical


units from the star (2). The orbits of most of the particles are inclined 5 degrees or


less to the plane of the system (2). These minimal orbital inclinations are typical of the


major planets in our own solar system. There is evidence that the circumstellar material


around Beta Pictoris takes the form of a highly flattened disk, rather than a spherical


shell implies an almost certain association with planet formation (2). The disk material


itself is believed to be a potential source for planet accretion (2). This retention of


nearly coplanar orbits in the Beta Pictoris disk is a qualitative argument in support of


its being a relatively young system (2). Some astronomers believe that we are witnessing


planet formation in the process.


Lagage and Pantin found that the inner region of the disk surrounding Beta Pictoris is


clear of dust, a prime indicator that there is evidence of one or more planetary bodies


(3).


The depletion zone extends to about 15 AU from the star, about the same size as our solar


system; and has an average particle density only one tenth of the area just outside this


zone (3).


Lagage and Pantin believe that the inner zone may have been swept clean by the


gravitational pull of a planet orbiting around Beta Pictoris (3). A planet would


gravitationally deflect the particles out of the inner zone. This planet, which is only


believed to exist, may also be deflec

ting comets into the star, as indicated by the


presence of highly variable absorption lines in the spectrum of Beta Pictoris (3).


The infrared image by Lagage and Pantin also provide information that the edge-on disk is


not symmetrical around the star (3). This suggests a more intimate relationship between


the asymmetry and the properties of the inner disk. As the orbital timescale for particles


is relatively short (less than 100 years), one would expect that the irregularities in the


disk would have been smoothed out by now (3). Unless, there was something stirring it up,


such as a planet (3).


If there is a planet orbiting Beta Pictoris, its orbit is probably eccentric, as are most


of the planetary orbits in our solar system (4). A planet with even a moderately eccentric


orbit would generate the asymmetry that is been noted in the dust disk surrounding Beat


Pictoris (4).


The Hubble Space Telescope, using the high-resolution spectrograph, found that the disk


surrounding beta Pictoris consists of two parts: an outer ring of small, solid particles,


and an inner ring of diffuse gas within a few hundred miles of the star (5).


Albert Boggess, an astronomer at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, suspects that


the gas comes from the ring of solid particles (5). If he is correct, then the gas may be


a sign that planets are being born there. The gas could be a result from the collision of


solid particles in the outer ring accreting into planets that are still too small to see


because of the brightness of the star itself (5). During the collisions some of the


particles would be vaporized and drawn toward the star. The planets in our own solar


system are believed to have formed through countless numbers of such collisions (5).


Boggess also believes that Beta Pictoris is very similar to a very early phase of our own


solar system (5).


Additional evidence, from the Hubble, also suggests that Beta Pictoris might be following


in our footsteps. The gaseous inner ring appears to contain clumps of material spiraling


toward the star (5). These clumps may be comets, diverted from the normal paths by close


calls with protoplanets (5). This also fits with current ideas about the evolution of our


own solar system. Gases from comet impacts may have been the creating factor of the


Earth’s atmosphere and oceans (5).


Wetherill argues that life on Earth is reliant upon the existence of Jupiter and Saturn,


because they cleansed our Solar System of most of its planetesimals (comets) that,


otherwise, would be striking the Earth (6). In order for a planet to survive long enough


for life to begin, it is necessary for the existence of gas giants (Jupiter and Saturn) to


get rid of the hazardous comets.


No one person can say for sure whether there are planets in the Beta Pictoris System, or


not. However, it is definitely a possibility. There is a circumstellar disk surrounding


Beta Pictoris. It is a highly flattened disk, as was the disk that once surrounded the


Sun. The disk contains the necessary elements for planet formation. The star is a young


one. The inner zone of the disk is clear. All of these things point to the almost probable


formation of planets. Richard Terrile, from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, says,


“It’s hard not to form planets from material like this (7).”


To answer whether or not there could be life on one of these planets, is not easy to say.


No one can really even speculate. I, believe that it is possible, if all the variables


come together in just the right way. I am not ‘earthnocentric’ to assume that


the earth is the only planet in the Universe that can sustain life. Whether or not a


planet in the Beta Pictoris system has what it takes, who knows, we can only wait and


watch.


BIBLIOGRAPHY(1) Moons And Planets, third edition; William K.


Hartman; Wadsworth Publishing company;


California; 1993.(2) A Circumstellar Disk Around Beta Pictoris; Science;


volume 226; pages 1421-1424.(3) Footprints in The Dust; Charles M. Telesco;


Nature; volume 369; pages 610-611.(4) Dust Depletion In The Inner Disk Of Beta Pictoris


As A Possible Indicator Of Planets; P. O. Lagage


and E. Pantin; Nature; volume 369; pages 628-


630.(5) Birth Of A Solar System?; Tim Folger; Discover;


volume 13; page 27.(6) Inhibition Of Giant-planet formation By Rapid Gas


Depletion Around Young Stars; B. Zucherman,


T. Forveille, and J. H. Kastner; Nature; volume


373; pages 494-496.(7) A Planet Around Beta Pictoris?; Sky and Telescope;


Volume 88; page 10.


ADDITIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHYA Closer Look At Beta Pictoris; Astronomy;


volume 21; Page 18.Birth Announcements; Scientific American;


volume 256; pages 60+.Faraway Planets; Science Digest; volume 94;


page 47.Protoplanetary nebula around Beta Pictoris;


Astronomy; volume 13; page 60.


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