The end of the Solar System

The end of the Solar System

Earth will lose its oceans. Chaos may destabilize the rocky planets. The Sun will go red giant and swallow the inner planets. The outer planets’ orbits will widen as the Sun becomes a white dwarf. Passing stars will destabilize the planets’ orbits and, in about 100 billion years, finally strip away the last planet.

Orbital migration

Orbital migration

TL;DR: Earth- to Neptune-mass planets migrate through the disk — usually inward, and fast. Giant planets carve gaps in the disk (“anti-donuts”) and migrate slowly, usually inward. Things can get crazy when lots of planets migrate together.

From planetesimals to planetary “embryos”

From planetesimals to planetary “embryos”

This is chapter 3 in the Solar System’s story. We’re chugging along, growing bigger and bigger things… Planetesimal accretion After mountain-sized (~100 km-scale) planetesimals form from concentrations of drifting pebbles, they continue to grow in two ways. The simplest growth route for planetesimals is simply to crash into other planetesimals; this is called planetesimal accretion….

Cosmic fireworks!

Cosmic fireworks!

Time for an astro-thought experiment. You belong to a super-advanced civilization with the ability to shape the cosmos as you wish. You can move around black holes, stars, planets, comets and moons (like the builders of the ultimate planetary systems). What would your civilization plan for big celebrations? What are their ‘fireworks’? What astronomical phenomena…

Cohorts of stars orbiting black holes (with planets, moons, and eclipses!)

Cohorts of stars orbiting black holes (with planets, moons, and eclipses!)

This post starts off with some world-building, jumps into eclipses and moons’ orbits, and finishes with a brand new Kalgash system that Isaac Asimov would be proud of (dropped into darkness every 2000 years!). More than one planet can share the same orbit around a star. This is not big news: the concept of Trojan…

How Borisov found Borisov (the second interstellar object)

How Borisov found Borisov (the second interstellar object)

To start things off, a limerick: My dear old friend ‘Oumuamua I asked her — What’s up? What is new-ah? “I’ve been thinking of That guy Borisov The interstellar number Two-ah!” Figuring out what’s up with a new population of astronomical objects is like going to a party without knowing the dress code.  Here’s what’s…

Second chance planets: Iceball worlds that thaw out when their stars go red giant

Second chance planets: Iceball worlds that thaw out when their stars go red giant

A while back I wrote a series of posts called How planets die. It was about all the ways planets can be sterilized or destroyed.  I even made a “planetary death scale”.  Gruesome stuff. Let’s liven things up with a new mini-series on Second-Chance Planets. These are planets that get a second chance at life. …

Is Pluto a mega-comet?

Is Pluto a mega-comet?

Short answer: Well sort of, but it’s more useful to think of it as being built from the same stuff as comets. Like an Uncle of the comets. Read on for an explanation. Earlier this week my wife mentioned a headline she saw.  “Pluto is a giant comet?  Whoa!” It was all over the place:…

Real-life Sci-Fi world 11: Kalgash, a planet in permanent daytime (from Asimov’s Nightfall)

Real-life Sci-Fi world 11: Kalgash, a planet in permanent daytime (from Asimov’s Nightfall)

Isaac Asimov‘s sci-fi stories are one reason I wanted to become an astronomer (I talked about this in a recent interview). So I’m a little sad to shoot down a classic…. Nightfall is a classic Asimov story (and later, novel). The residents of a planet called Kalgash live in system of six stars that leaves…

Exo-moons: Innocent bystanders during gas giant instabilities

Exo-moons: Innocent bystanders during gas giant instabilities

Gas giants are the bullies of planetary systems.  They are hundreds of times more massive than small rocky or icy worlds, so when gas giants throw a tantrum, their whole planetary system feels it. Giant planet moons are among the innocent bystanders swept up in the chaos. Giant planets around other stars have different orbits…

A cigar from another star

A cigar from another star

In Rendezvous with Rama (by Arthur C. Clarke), a mysterious object is discovered passing through the Solar System.  The object has a strange shape — it’s a giant cylinder.  It was discovered by the Spaceguard survey, designed to find objects that might impact Earth (so-called near-Earth objects).  Spoiler alert: the cylinder is a spaceship sent…

Ode to 7 orbs

Ode to 7 orbs

Wake up now people, I’ve got some big news! You won’t want to miss this. You don’t want to snooze. We just found some planets while we were stargazing Gather ’round, listen up. These ones are amazing! And it’s not just one new planet. There are seven! All orbiting one star up there in the…

No livable planets without life

No livable planets without life

Life is caught in a chicken-and-egg situation. For life to exist on a planet, the planet must of course have the right conditions for life. The planet must be habitable. But a planet’s habitability depends in large part on whether it already has life. It’s a lot easier for a planet with life to be habitable. So a planet needs life to be able to host life….

The colors of other worlds

The colors of other worlds

Carl Sagan famously called Earth the “pale blue dot”. Viewed from a large distance, that is what our complex, vibrant, living planet looks like. In the search for life around other stars, we should be looking for other pale blue dots, right? Maybe not. There is some reason to think that not all habitable planets…

Real-life sci-fi world #6: Pandora (from the movie Avatar), the habitable moon of a gas giant planet

Real-life sci-fi world #6: Pandora (from the movie Avatar), the habitable moon of a gas giant planet

Welcome to Real-life Sci-fi worlds.  I use science to explore life-bearing worlds that are the settings for science fiction stories.  Up today: can the moon of a gas giant planet — like Pandora from the movie Avatar — really be habitable? Pandora is one of the coolest-ever settings for a science fiction story.  The life-bearing…

Real-life sci-fi world #4: Earth around a brown dwarf

Real-life sci-fi world #4: Earth around a brown dwarf

Welcome to Real-life Sci-fi worlds.  We are using science to explore life-bearing worlds that are the settings for science fiction stories.  Up today: an Earth-like planet orbiting a brown dwarf. Setting Planets have been found orbiting all kinds of stars.  Stars like the Sun.  Stars brighter and fainter than the Sun.  Giant stars.  Planets have…

Real-life sci-fi worlds #3: the oscillating Earth

Real-life sci-fi worlds #3: the oscillating Earth

Welcome to Real-life Sci-fi worlds.  We are using science to explore life-bearing worlds that are the settings for science fiction stories.  Up today: the oscillating Earth. Setting Earth’s orbit is not fixed.  Gravitational kicks from the other planets change the shape of Earth’s orbit.  Earth’s orbit oscillates between being perfectly circular (having an “eccentricity” of…

Giraffes and planets

Giraffes and planets

Giraffes are covered in patches.  The patches are brown and the space in between the patches is white.  Everyone knows this. Here is something you probably didn’t know: you can see those patches in infrared light.  In simple terms, infrared light measures heat (at least at the temperatures we are used to in everyday life). …

Something amazing will happen on June 15th but no one on Earth will see it

Something amazing will happen on June 15th but no one on Earth will see it

I discovered something spectacular completely by accident.  I was getting ready for the announcement of the discovery of the extra-solar planet Kepler-186 f.  You remember, the Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone?  It was all over the news (even in French) just a couple months ago. I made an animation of the Kepler-186 system.  The…

Building the ultimate Solar System part 4: two ninja moves — moons and co-orbital planets

Building the ultimate Solar System part 4: two ninja moves — moons and co-orbital planets

We are building the ultimate Solar System.    In Part 1 we chose the right star.  In Part 2 we chose the right planets. In Part 3 we chose the right orbits for the planets. Today’s job: Discovering two ninja moves that will allow us to pack way more worlds in the habitable zone. The…

Building the ultimate Solar System part 3: choosing the planets’ orbits

Building the ultimate Solar System part 3: choosing the planets’ orbits

We are building the ultimate Solar System.    In Part 1 we chose the right star.  In Part 2 we chose the right planets. Today’s job: choosing the right orbits for the planets. Let’s get started.  Our goal is simple.  We want to pack as many planets into our star’s habitable zone as possible.  We…

Building the ultimate Solar System part 2: choosing the right planets

Building the ultimate Solar System part 2: choosing the right planets

We are building the ultimate Solar System.    In Part 1 we chose the right star. Today’s job: choosing the right planets to put in our ultimate Solar System.  Let’s stick to two defining characteristics: a planet’s size (or mass) and its composition. We want Goldilocks-ish planets.  They shouldn’t be too small, too big, too…

Building the ultimate Solar System part 1: choosing the right star

Building the ultimate Solar System part 1: choosing the right star

We are building the ultimate Solar System.  Here is an introduction to the game.    What kind of star will anchor our ultimate Solar System? It comes down to two choices: stars like the Sun or cooler, redder stars sometimes called “cool stars” or “red dwarfs”. Why not stars bigger than the Sun?  Because they…

Vega: a planetary poem

Vega: a planetary poem

  Here is a tale ’bout a bright star named Vega. For years, astronomers have combed through their data and discovered that Vega is more than a star. It’s surrounded by dust clouds: one near and one far. Next to the star is some dust that’s quite hot. We’ve only just found it. There isn’t…

Three more planetary stooges

We’ve discussed some classes of planet that are pretty strange: hot super-Earths, hot Jupiters and eccentric gas giants.  But that was just the warm-up.  In this post we’ll check out three more extra-weird ones. First up: Tatoine planets.  In case you are less nerdy than you should be, Tatooine is where Luke came from in…

Wasp-12b: a hot Jupiter

Let’s meet a planet called WASP-12b.  [Before you ask, extra-solar planets are named based on how they were discovered or their catalog number.  Wasp-12b is the twelfth found by the WASP (“Wide Angle Search for Planets”) survey.  The “b” indicates that the object is a companion; Wasp-12 itself is the planet-hosting star.] WASP-12b is a…

The habitable zone, part 1

[This post is co-written by Franck Selsis] Where should we look for extra-solar life?  In a star’s habitable zone of course!  Any planet in that magical Goldilocks zone must host life, right? Well, not exactly.  The habitable zone should really be called the liquid water zone.  A planet with the right characteristics that orbits its…

The Grand Tack

The Grand Tack

One of the most exciting recent things that I’ve worked on recently — with colleagues in France and the US — is a new model for how the Solar System formed that we call the Grand Tack. “Why do we need a new model for how the Solar System formed?”, you might ask. “What was…

Build a better Solar System

Build a better Solar System

[UPDATE: a new series on building the ultimate Solar System starts here] The Solar System is a disappointment.  It does contain an inhabited planet with forests and oceans and frisbees and beer (Earth). But it only has one.  There are a couple worlds with some potential, but they are pretty disappointing too.  Jupiter’s moons Europa…