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"How special is the Solar System?" by M. E. Beer1.,
A.R. King1, M. Livio2 and J. E. Pringle2 is posted at: http://arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0407476 MY COMMENT The high eccentricity of the extraterrestrial gas giants implies that all or nearly all extraterrestrial planets have eccentric orbits and that solar system is uncommon. In addition to the nearly circular orbits (except for Pluto), the solar planets are almost evenly distributed as predicted by the Titius-Bode Law. The Titius-Bode Law also works for moons orbiting solar planets, but does not work well for Neptune and Pluto: http://astrosun2.astro.cornell.edu/a.../bodes_law.htm Apparently the solar system accretion disk was not disturbed by interlopers when planets and moons formed 4.5 billion years ago, except for the most distant planets: Neptune and Pluto. We still do not know if planetary orbits are inherently unstable. It seems that planetary systems having many planets should be less stable than planetary systems having few planets. The absence of massive bodies in the middle of the solar system (known as the main asteroid belt) may have stabilized the solar system. If planetary orbits are inherently unstable than solar system is uncommon and SETI is a waste of time. Simple forms of life may survive on a somewhat unstable planet, but they cannot create a technological civilization. We need better computer simulations of orbital stability -- these simulations are more important than all the microwave SETI research. PS. I wonder if the Moon (Luna) acts like a vacuum cleaner in a sense that it hurls deadly asteroids away from the Earth. __________________________________________________ ______________ RELATED ARTICLES Computer simulations of orbital stability are difficult. For example, the following paper is based on simulations made on a supercomputer having 128 processors, and yet it neglects possible inclinations as well as planetary systems having more than 3 planets: Stability of Terrestrial Planets in the Habitable Zone of Gl 777 A, HD 72659, Gl 614, 47 Uma and HD 4208 http://arXiv:astro-ph/0403152 Excerpt from "The Stability Of The Orbits Of Earth-Mass Planets In And Near The Habitable Zones Of Known Exoplanetary Systems" by Barrie W Jones, David R Underwood, P Nick Sleep, http://www.astrophys-assist.com/educate/cgino617.pdf: "We have shown that Earth-mass planets could survive in variously restricted regions of the habitable zones (HZs) of most of a sample of nine of the 93 main-sequence exoplanetary systems confirmed by May 2003. In a preliminary extrapolation of our results to the other systems, we estimate that roughly a third of the 93 systems might be able to have Earth-mass planets in stable, confined orbits somewhere in their HZs." This is a poor quality article. It does not explain how they calculated the orbital stability. Excerpt from "Dynamical Stability and Habitability of a Terrestrial Planet in HD74156" by M. Colleen Gino, http://www.astrophys-assist.com/educate/cgino617.pdf: "The dynamical stability of the system must be taken into account as well, particularly in light of the impact that large planets can have on the orbit of the terrestrial planet. For a terrestrial planet to remain habitable, there is a dynamical requirement that other planets in the system don’t gravitationally perturb the planet outside of its habitability zone. In a recent study involving 85 of the known extrasolar planetary systems, Menou and Tabachnik (2003) found that more than half of these systems, primarily those with distant eccentric giant planets, are not likely to support terrestrial planets and are therefore dynamically inhabitable. Marcy and Butler (2000) give similar evidence for the likelihood of terrestrial planets to be scattered gravitationally from the high eccentricity of Jupiter-like planets that exist between 2 – 3 AU. Under such circumstances the circular orbits and the long term survival of terrestrial planets is not guaranteed." |
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