Date:
Tue, 10/11/201512:30-13:30
Location:
Kaplun building, Room No. 200
Lecturer: Dr. Nicholas Stone
Affiliation: Columbia University
Abstract:
Several lines of observational evidence suggest
that white dwarfs receive small birth kicks due
to anisotropic mass loss. If other stars possess
extrasolar analogues to the Solar Oort cloud,
the orbits of comets in such clouds will be
scrambled by white dwarf natal kicks. Although
most comets will be unbound, some will be
placed on low angular momentum orbits
vulnerable to sublimation or tidal disruption.
The dusty debris from these comets will
manifest itself as an IR excess temporarily
visible around newborn white dwarfs; very
similar disks have already been seen in the Helix
Nebula, and around several other young white
dwarfs. Future observations with the James
Webb Space Telescope may distinguish this
hypothesis from alternatives such as a
dynamically excited Kuiper Belt analogue.
Although competing hypotheses exist, the
observation that ≳15% of young white dwarfs
possess such disks, if interpreted as indeed
being cometary in origin, provides indirect
evidence that low mass gas giants (thought
necessary to produce an Oort cloud) are
common in the outer regions of extrasolar
planetary systems. Hydrogen abundances in the
atmospheres of older white dwarfs can, if
sufficiently low, also be used to place
constraints on the joint parameter space of
natal kicks and exo-Oort cloud models.
Additional details of the upcoming Astrophysics'
seminars can be found on the following link.
האירוע הזה כולל שיחת וידאו ב-Google Hangouts.
הצטרף: https://hangouts.google.com/hangouts/_/mail.huji.ac.il/astrophysics?hceid=bWFpbC5odWppLmFjLmlsX2c0czhydDlpcmhwZzRvdGNybWIzZGFqcjdvQGdyb3VwLmNhbGVuZGFyLmdvb2dsZS5jb20.bsarc0cajd9f4t79ckl708tvqk&hs=121