Origin of the orbital architecture of the giant planets of the Solar System (original) (raw)
- Letter
- Published: 26 May 2005
Nature volume 435, pages 459–461 (2005)Cite this article
Abstract
Planetary formation theories1,2 suggest that the giant planets formed on circular and coplanar orbits. The eccentricities of Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus, however, reach values of 6 per cent, 9 per cent and 8 per cent, respectively. In addition, the inclinations of the orbital planes of Saturn, Uranus and Neptune take maximum values of ∼2 degrees with respect to the mean orbital plane of Jupiter. Existing models for the excitation of the eccentricity of extrasolar giant planets3,4,5 have not been successfully applied to the Solar System. Here we show that a planetary system with initial quasi-circular, coplanar orbits would have evolved to the current orbital configuration, provided that Jupiter and Saturn crossed their 1:2 orbital resonance. We show that this resonance crossing could have occurred as the giant planets migrated owing to their interaction with a disk of planetesimals6,7. Our model reproduces all the important characteristics of the giant planets' orbits, namely their final semimajor axes, eccentricities and mutual inclinations.
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Acknowledgements
R.G. is grateful to the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico for financial support of his sabbatical year in the OCA observatory in Nice. The work of K.T. was supported by an EC Marie Curie Individual Fellowship. A.M. and H.F.L. thank the CNRS and the NSF for funding the collaboration between the OCA and the SwRI groups. H.F.L. is grateful to NASA's Origins and PG&G programmes.
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Authors and Affiliations
- Observatoire de la Côte d' Azur, CNRS, BP 4229, 06304, Nice, Cedex 4, France
K. Tsiganis, R. Gomes, A. Morbidelli & H. F. Levison - GEA/OV/UFRJ and ON/MCT, Ladeira do Pedro Antonio, 43-Centro 20.080-090, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
R. Gomes - Department of Space Studies, Southwest Research Institute, 1050 Walnut Street, Suite 400, Boulder, Colorado, 80302, USA
H. F. Levison
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Correspondence toA. Morbidelli.
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Supplementary Discussion
A detailed illustration of the 1:2 MMR crossing of Jupiter and Saturn. This file also includes Supplementary Figure S1. (PDF 1509 kb)
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Tsiganis, K., Gomes, R., Morbidelli, A. et al. Origin of the orbital architecture of the giant planets of the Solar System.Nature 435, 459–461 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03539
- Received: 06 December 2004
- Accepted: 11 March 2005
- Issue Date: 26 May 2005
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03539
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Editorial Summary
Solar System giants
A collection of three papers in this issue, tackling seemingly unrelated planetary phenomena, marks a notable unification of Solar System dynamics. The three problems covered are the hard-to-explain orbits of giant planets, the evolution of the orbits of Jupiter's Trojan asteroids, and the cause of the ‘Late Heavy Bombardment’ that peppered the Moon with meteors, comets and asteroids some 700 million years after the planets were formed. Key to all these events, on this new model, was a rapid migration of the giant planets (Saturn, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus) after a long period of stability within the Solar System.