How to Tell if the Proposed Planet Nine is Really a Captured Exoplanet
Is there an exoplanet in the Solar System?
Authors:
Mustill et al
Abstract:
We
investigate the prospects for the capture of the proposed Planet 9 from
other stars in the Sun's birth cluster. Any capture scenario must
satisfy three conditions: the encounter must be more distant than ~150
au to avoid perturbing the Kuiper belt; the other star must have a
wide-orbit planet (a>~100au); the planet must be captured onto an
appropriate orbit to sculpt the orbital distribution of wide-orbit
Solar System bodies. Here we use N-body simulations to show that these
criteria may be simultaneously satisfied. In a few percent of slow close
encounters in a cluster, bodies are captured onto heliocentric, Planet
9-like orbits. During the ~100 Myr cluster phase, many stars are likely
to host planets on highly-eccentric orbits with apastron distances
beyond 100 au if Neptune-sized planets are common and susceptible to
planet--planet scattering. While the existence of Planet 9 remains
unproven, we consider capture from one of the Sun's young brethren a
plausible route to explain such an object's orbit. Capture appears to
predict a large population of Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs) whose
orbits are aligned with the captured planet, and we propose that
different formation mechanisms will be distinguishable based on their
imprint on the distribution of TNOs.
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