Extreme Conditions in a Close Analog to the Young Solar System: Herschel Observations of ε Eridani

Open Access
Authors
  • J.S. Greaves
  • B. Sibthorpe
  • B. Acke
  • E.E. Pantin
  • B. Vandenbussche
  • G. Olofsson
  • C. Dominik ORCID logo
  • M.J. Barlow
  • G.J. Bendo
  • J.A.D.L. Blommaert
  • A. Brandeker
  • B.L. de Vries
  • W.R.F. Dent
  • J. Di Francesco
  • M. Fridlund
  • W.K. Gear
  • P.M. Harvey
  • M.R. Hogerheijde
  • W.S. Holland
  • R.J. Ivison
  • R. Liseau
  • B.C. Matthews
  • G.L. Pilbratt
  • H.J. Walker
  • C. Waelkens
Publication date 2014
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Volume | Issue number 791 | 1
Pages (from-to) L11
Number of pages 5
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Far-infrared Herschel images of the epsilon Eridani system, seen at a fifth of the Sun's present age, resolve two belts of debris emission. Fits to the 160 μm PACS image yield radial spans for these belts of 12-16 and 54-68 AU. The south end of the outer belt is ≈10% brighter than the north end in the PACS+SPIRE images at 160, 250, and 350 μm, indicating a pericenter glow attributable to a planet "c." From this asymmetry and an upper bound on the offset of the belt center, this second planet should be mildly eccentric (ec ≈ 0.03-0.3). Compared to the asteroid and Kuiper Belts of the young Sun, the epsilon Eri belts are intermediate in brightness and more similar to each other, with up to 20 km sized collisional fragments in the inner belt totaling ≈5% of an Earth mass. This reservoir may feed the hot dust close to the star and could send many impactors through the Habitable Zone, especially if it is being perturbed by the suspected planet epsilon Eri b, at semi-major axis ≈3 AU.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/791/1/L11
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Extreme Conditions in a Close Analog (Final published version)
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