2018A&A...610A..33P


Query : 2018A&A...610A..33P

2018A&A...610A..33P - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 610A, 33-33 (2018/2-1)

Did a stellar fly-by shape the planetary system around Pr 0211 in the cluster M44?

PFALZNER S., BHANDARE A. and VINCKE K.

Abstract (from CDS):

Out of the ∼3000 exoplanets detected so far, only 14 planets are members of open clusters: one of them is the exoplanet system around Pr 0211 in the cluster M44. The system consists of at least 2 planets, and the outer planet moves on a highly eccentric orbit at 5.5AU. One hypothesis is that a close fly-by of a neighbouring star was responsible for the eccentric orbit. We test this hypothesis. First we determined the type of fly-by that would lead to the observed parameters, and then we used this result to determine the history of such fly-bys in simulations of the early dynamics in an M44-like environment. We find that although very close fly-bys are required to obtain the observed properties of Pr 0211c, such fly-bys are relatively common as a result of the high stellar density and longevity of the cluster. Such close fly-bys are most frequent during the first 1-2Myr after cluster formation, corresponding to a cluster age ≤3Myr. During the first 2 to 3Myr, about 6.5% of stars experience a fly-by that would lead to such a small system-size as observed for Pr 0211 or even smaller. It is unclear whether planets generally form on such short timescales. However, after this time, the close fly-by rate is still 0.2-0.5Myr–1, which means that 12-20% of stars would experience such close fly-bys over this time span when we extrapolate the situation to the age of M44. Our simulations show that the fly-by scenario is a realistic option for the formation of eccentricity orbits of the planets in M44 (Wang et al., 2015MNRAS.449.3543W). The occurrence of such events is relatively high, leading to the expectation that similar systems are likely common in open clusters in general.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2018

Journal keyword(s): open clusters and associations: general - protoplanetary disks - planets and satellites: general - planet-star interactions - galaxies: clusters: individual: M44 - methods: numerical

Simbad objects: 18

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Number of rows : 18
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 104 GlC 00 24 05.359 -72 04 53.20     4.09     ~ 3919 0
2 IC 348 OpC 03 44 31.7 +32 09 32           ~ 1394 1
3 Cl Melotte 25 OpC 04 29 47.3 +16 56 53           ~ 3080 0
4 NAME Taurus Complex SFR 04 41.0 +25 52           ~ 4422 0
5 NAME Orion Nebula Cluster OpC 05 35.0 -05 29           ~ 2334 0
6 NGC 2024 Cl* 05 41 43 -01 50.5           ~ 1154 1
7 NGC 2301 OpC 06 51 46.3 +00 27 54   6.30 6.0     ~ 159 0
8 NGC 2632 OpC 08 40 13.0 +19 37 16           ~ 1566 0
9 [QWL2012] Pr0211b Pl 08 42 11.4988704792 +19 16 37.237499940           ~ 18 1
10 [QWL2012] Pr0211c Pl 08 42 11.4988704792 +19 16 37.237499940           ~ 14 0
11 Cl* NGC 2632 JC 278 Ro* 08 42 11.4988704792 +19 16 37.237499940   13.060 12.143     K1V 74 1
12 NGC 2682 OpC 08 51 23.0 +11 48 50           ~ 2342 0
13 Cl Trumpler 14 OpC 10 43 56.6 -59 33 11   5.70 5.5     ~ 509 0
14 NGC 3603 OpC 11 15 10.8 -61 15 32           ~ 1068 1
15 NAME Upper Sco Association As* 16 12 -23.4           ~ 1369 1
16 Cl Westerlund 1 Cl* 16 47 02.4 -45 51 07           ~ 569 0
17 NAME Arches Cluster Cl* 17 45 50.5 -28 49 28           ~ 738 0
18 NGC 7789 OpC 23 57 20.2 +56 43 34   7.68 6.7     ~ 528 0

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