Shock Waves Needed to Create Planets

Major Planet Formation Mystery Solved
An artist's conception of a stellar protoplanetary disk, where planet formation occurs. (Image credit: NASA)

Shock waves around dusty, young stars might be creating the raw materials for planets, scientists now say.

NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope detected quartz-like crystals around young stars just beginning to form planets, about 400 light-years away. The crystals, called cristobalite and tridymite, are known to reside in comets, in volcanic lava flows on Earth, and in some meteorites that land on Earth.

"By studying these other star systems, we can learn about the very beginnings of our own planets 4.6 billion years ago," said William Forrest of the University of Rochester in New York. "Spitzer has given us a better idea of how the raw materials of planets are produced very early on."

Planets are born out of swirling pancake-like disks of dust and gas that surround young stars. They start out as mere grains of dust swimming around in a disk of gas and dust, before lumping together to form full-fledged planets, according to the leading theory. During the early stages of planet development, the dust grains crystallize and adhere together, while the disk itself starts to settle and flatten. This is thought to occur in the first millions of years of a star's life.

It is these high-temperature forms of silica crystals, specifically cristobalite and tridymite, that Forrest's team found in planet-forming disks around other stars for the first time.

"Cristobalite and tridymite are essentially high-temperature forms of quartz," Sargent said. "If you heat quartz crystals, you'll get these compounds."

In fact, the crystals require temperatures as high as 1,220 Kelvin (about 1,740 degrees Fahrenheit) to form. But young planet-forming disks are only about 100 to 1,000 Kelvin (about minus 280 degrees Fahrenheit to 1,340 Fahrenheit) — too cold to make the crystals. Because the crystals require heating followed by rapid cooling to form, astronomers theorized that shock waves could be the cause.

The findings are in agreement with local evidence from our own solar system. Spherical pebbles, called chondrules, found in ancient meteorites that fell to Earth are also thought to have been crystallized by shock waves in our solar system's young planet-forming disk.

 

 

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