Planets Not Sole Cause of Unique Dust Patterns Around Stars: Study

Saturn’s moons create gaps in the planet’s rings; by studying them, astronomers can discern the presence of the moon. But when this happens around stars, a new force enters the picture.

An artist’s impression of a protoplanetary disc, composed of rocks, gas and dust, around a young star. Under certain conditions, the material in the disc condenses out to form planets. Credit: skeeze/pixabay

Over two decades ago, scientists confirmed the first-ever detection of a planet outside the Solar System – an exoplanet. With it, the possibility of finding more potentially habitable worlds catapulted the planet-hunting endeavour into the public imagination. Meanwhile, astronomers kept discovering one exoplanet after another, all of them within the Milky Way.

It was splendid to realise that our host galaxy itself was home to so many worlds of interest, but whether other galaxies also housed such worlds has remained a matter of theory. Recently, however, this speculation was called up when astronomers reported that they had perhaps found an exoplanet in another galaxy.

Hunting for planets is not easy. Even with our most advanced telescopes, the chances of capturing an image of an exoplanet are slim at best. Most planets are minuscule compared to the much-bigger and bright stars they orbit. The starlight reflected by planets thus becomes lost in the blinding light of the star itself. This makes it difficult to detect exoplanets by ‘direct’ imaging. So astronomers came up with a few tricks. One of them infers the presence of planets by looking at patterns formed by dust and debris around a star.

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“Gravitational perturbations from planets open gaps and excite spiral density waves in disks, and so these features are inferred to indicate the presence of planets,” James Stone, an astrophysicist at Princeton University, told The Wire. This is similar to what happens in Saturn’s rings – where spaces are created in the dusty disks and patterns enforced by the planet’s moons.

Elegant as this method is, it seems they might not always be reliable because, it turns out, these patterns could form without planets, too. A recent study to be published in the Astrophysical Journal found that similar patterns can be created by a combination of forces, not including an unseen planet’s gravitational pull.

Dust and gas coexist as they whirl around a star. When an energetic beam of radiation hits an atom inside a dust particle, it can knock off an electron. The liberated electron can in turn can transfer its energy to a nearby gas particle, heating it. As this happens billions of times over, the gas heats up and creates a high pressure region which acts as a sink for dust particles. So more dust particles shed more electrons and this leads to an increasing heating of the gaseous region.

This cascading effect – the photoelectric instability – is a major player in creating a variety of patterns in the dust-gas area: clumps of dust, disks, rings, arcs and spirals. These structures could potentially reveal information about an unseen planet.

“The width of the gap, and the amplitude and pitch angle of spiral waves, can tell us about the mass of the planet that produces them,” Stone, who was not involved in the study, said. “Similarly, the phase of the spiral wave can indicate at what azimuthal angle the planet is located.

By studying the geometry of these features, astronomers pick up clues about where in the disk a planet could be located, its approximate mass and, as a result, how bright it could be.


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