Tidal Downsizing Model. IV. Destructive feedback in planets [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1510.01630


I argue that feedback is as important to formation of planets as it is to formation of stars and galaxies. Energy released by massive solid cores puffs up pre-collapse gas giant planets, making them vulnerable to tidal disruptions by their host stars. I find that feedback is the ultimate reason for some of the most robust properties of the observed exoplanet populations: the rarity of gas giants at all separations from $\sim 0.1$ to $\sim 100$~AU, the abundance of $\sim 10 M_\oplus$ cores but dearth of planets more massive than $\sim 20 M_\oplus$. Feedback effects can also explain (i) rapid assembly of massive cores at large separations as needed for Uranus, Neptune and the suspected HL Tau planets; (ii) the small core in Jupiter yet large cores in Uranus and Neptune; (iii) the existence of rare “metal monster” planets such as CoRoT-20b, a gas giant made of heavy elements by up to $\sim 50$\%.

Read this paper on arXiv…

S. Nayakshin
Wed, 7 Oct 15
26/72

Comments: 17 pages, 10 figures, submitted to MNRAS (version significantly expanded to address referee’s report)