Extrasolar Oort Clouds and Kuiper Belts
Authors:
Stone et al
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 a debris disk temporarily visible around newborn white
dwarfs; examples of such disks may already have been seen in the Helix Nebula,
and around several other young WDs. Future observations with the James Webb
Space Telescope will distinguish this hypothesis from alternatives such as a
dynamically excited Kuiper Belt analogue. If interpreted as indeed being
cometary in origin, the observation that >15% of young WDs possess such disks
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.
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