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Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman
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Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk

Sumita Jayaraman

Page 2: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Why do we study the Zodiacal Cloud?

Yields information on the formation and evolution of the interplanetary dust disk in our Solar System.

For the Solar System

For Exo-zodi Disks and Planetary For Exo-zodi Disks and Planetary SystemsSystemsDirect application to the structure of Direct application to the structure of

exo- zodi disks and planetary exo- zodi disks and planetary detection.detection.

Page 3: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Structures in the zodiacal cloud• Earth’s Resonant Ring

• Dynamical Asymmetries

• Dust Bands

Structures in Exo-zodiacal disks

Contents

Page 4: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Structures in the zodiacal cloud

• Earth’s Resonant Ring• Dynamical Asymmetries

• Dust Bands

Structures in Exo-zodiacal disks

Contents

Page 5: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Zodiacal Peak-Flux Variation (COBE-DIRBE)

Average Trailing: 70.26 MJ/Sr

Average Leading: 68.5 MJy/Sr

Ring Flux : 1.7 MJy/Sr

(~2.5%)

Page 6: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Resonant Trapping of Dust Particles

Page 7: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Resonance Capture Probability vs Particle Size

Page 8: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Earth’s Resonant Ring Model

Sun

Spitzer’s Orbit

Page 9: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

At Spitzer Launch…

…After 2 years

Estimated Ring Flux: ~ 5.5 MJy/Sr (8% of Zody)

All-Sky View of RingTrailing Leading

Page 10: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Resonant Ring Obs. 25μm (COBE-DIRBE)

SN

S

LeadingTrailing

(Reach et al., 1995)

Page 11: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI All Sky Model for Extended Spitzer Mission

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3

Year 4

Year 5

At Launch

Page 12: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Goals of the Spitzer Project

• Track measurements of the Earth’s Resonant Ring as Spitzer traverses it.

• Monitor variations in the Ecliptic Pole flux.

• Measure the absolutely calibrated zodiacal flux and estimate background radiation levels during the mission.

• Obtain very high resolution images of the asteroidal dust bands.

Page 13: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Spitzer Zodical Obs.

Obs. Mode Direction of Obs. Instrument

Fast Scan-Map

~ -6 ° to +6 ° Ecliptic Latitude

MIPS

TPM Poles +90 ° and -90 ° IRAC & MIPS

TPM Ecliptic

(Trailing and Leading)

0 ° Ecliptic Latitude

ε =70 °, 90 °, 110 °

60 ° Ecliptic Latitude

ε =90°

IRAC & MIPS

Page 14: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Spitzer Project: Planned ObsS

N

S

LeadingTrailing

Page 15: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

IRAC North Ecliptic Pole Flux

2004

Page 16: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

IRAC North Ecliptic Pole Flux

2004

2005

Page 17: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

IRAC North Ecliptic Pole Flux

2004

2005

2006

Page 18: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

MIPS North Ecliptic Pole Flux

2004

2005

2006

Page 19: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Ring: Model vs Observations

EarthRing Model:

10 micron particles into

First order resonances

Spitzer Earthring Observations

2004: None

2006: 10% increase of in the NEP Flux at the maximum point

2004: None

2006 (May): 6% (1.1MJy increase in the NEP Flux)

Page 20: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Next Steps

• Analysis of Ecliptic Plane Observations (predicted increase in ring flux from 2.5%(1.7 MJy/Sr) of zody to 8% (5.5 MJy/Sr) of zody)

• Multiple Wavelength observations (3.6 and 70 microns) from IRAC, MIPS as well as IRS Peak-up mode.

Page 21: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Science Questions

• What is number density of particles in the ring?• What is the background number density required

to produce the flux variations?• What is the efficiency of capture into resonance

by an Earth-mass planet?• How do we distinguish a feature like trailing dust

cloud in ring from the planetary perturber in an exozodiacal disk?

Page 22: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Structures in the zodiacal cloud• Earth’s Resonant Ring

• Dynamical Asymmetries• Dust Bands

Structures in Exo-zodiacal disks

Contents

Page 23: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Dynamical Asymmetries in the Zodiacal cloud

• Off-center shift of the zodiacal cloud shown by the pole observations.

• Warps in the cloud due to the inclination and shift measured by the variations in peak flux.

Page 24: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Sun-Centered Cloud

SunEarth Orbit

Zodiacal Center

Earth Aphelion

Page 25: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Off-Center Cloud

SunEarth Orbit

Zodiacal Center

Earth Aphelion

Page 26: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Evidence for an off-center cloud

Page 27: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Inclination of the cloud

Page 28: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Zodiacal Peak-Flux Variation (COBE-DIRBE)

Ring Flux : 1.7 MJy/Sr

(~2.5%)

Page 29: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Zodiacal Peak-Flux Variationwithout the Ring

Page 30: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Zodiacal Peak-Flux Variationdue to Earth’s eccentricity

Page 31: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Warps in the Zodiacal cloud

Page 32: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Structures in the zodiacal cloud• Earth’s Resonant Ring

• Dynamical Asymmetries

• Dust BandsStructures in Exo-Zodiacal disks

Contents

Page 33: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Asteroidal Dust Bands

Scan

Page 34: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

Structures in the zodiacal cloud

• Earth’s Resonant Ring

• Dynamical Asymmetries

• Dust Bands

Structures in Exo-zodiacal disks

Contents

Page 35: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Dynamical Effects in Circumstellar Disks

• Resonant trapping – determined by the number and co-rotation of the clumps

• Recent planetesimal collisions in the disk – young dust bands

• Planetary perturbations on the disk due to one or more planets causing an inclined and off-center disk.

Page 36: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Planetary Signatures in Observed Disks

• Resonant Rings caused by larger Planets - ε Eridani

• Off-center disk – HR4796A• Gaps in the disk due to Resonant

Trapping and scattering due to Large Planet – β Pictoris ?

• Warps in the disk due to planetary perturbations - β Pictoris.

• Bands due to stochastic collisions.

Page 37: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI What do the structures tell us?

• Location of the planet(s), eccentricity of the orbit

• Mass of the planet(s)

• Size of the dust particles (lower limits)

Page 38: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI

ε Eridani

(Quillen & (Quillen & Thornedike, Thornedike, 2002)2002)

e = 0.3

M = 10- 4 MSun

A = 40 A.U.

Page 39: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI HR 4796A (Wyatt et al. 2002)

Estimate of Planet Mass > 10 Mass of Earth with e >0.02

Flux Asymmetry ~ 5%

Page 40: Zodiacal Cloud: The Local Circumstellar Disk Sumita Jayaraman.

PSI Challenges in Planetary Detection in Disks

• Young disks have dust and gas

• Structures observed in images do not provide unique solutions for planetary masses or location

• Source of dust is uncertain – especially for disks with small dust grains.