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Just flip-flop the position of Uranus and Neptune



Just flip-flop the position of Uranus and Neptune
Quick: Whats the order of the planets in the solar system? Need a little help? Maybe the following mnemonic rings a bell: My Very Educated Mother Just Served Up Nine Pizzas. Its useful for remembering the order of the planets today, but it wouldnt have been as useful in the past, and not just because the International Astronomical Union demoted Pluto to dwarf planet last year. The reason this mnemonic wouldnt have worked is because the planets werent always in the order they are today. Four billion years ago, early in the solar systems evolution, Uranus and Neptune switched places.

This is the result of recent work by Steve Desch, assistant professor in the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University. The work appears in this weeks Astrophysical Journal. Desch based his conclusion on his calculations of the surface density of the solar nebula. The solar nebula is the disk of gas and dust out of which all of the planets formed. The surface density or mass per area of the solar nebula protoplanetary disk is a fundamental quantity needed to calculate everything from how fast planets grow to the types of chemicals they are likely to contain.

Its very hard to observe the surface density in protoplanetary disks forming solar systems today, both because theyre too far away and because most observations detect only dust and miss everything larger than a baseball. So for the last 30 years most scientists have relied on an estimate of the surface density called the Minimum Mass Solar Nebula. The idea is simple: take the rocky component of each planet, add hydrogen and helium until it matches the Sun in composition, and spread the mass over the area of each planets orbit. The minimum mass solar nebula predicts disk masses not too different from what we can observe in forming solar systems. But it also predicts low surface densities, with the mass too spread out to form planets quickly.

I was thinking about planet formation and noticing that all the current models failed to predict how Jupiter could grow to its current size in the life time of the solar nebula, Desch recounts. Given Jupiters composition and size, models predicted it would take a number of millions of years for it to form, and billions of years for Uranus and Neptune but our solar system isnt that old, says Desch. Thats when I ran across the Nice model.

The Nice model (named for the city in France where it was developed) is based on sophisticated numerical calculations of the planets orbits over millions of years. It explains several aspects about the orbits of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, as well as the Kuiper Belt of comets beyond, by assuming the giant planets formed a lot closer together than theyre found today. Neptune, for example, formed less than half the distance from the Sun that it orbits today. And in 50% of their simulations, Uranus and Neptune switched places, eventhough there was no way to determine whether they did or not.

Desch realized the Nice model implied the mass of the solar system was packed together more tightly than the minimum mass solar nebula assumed. By spreading the masses of the planets over their original orbits, as predicted by the Nice model, he found a very smooth variation of surface density with distance from the Sun, albeit one that fell off very sharply far from the Sun. The fit varied by only a few percent from the planets masses, but only if Uranus and Neptune did indeed switch places. Neptune had to form closer to the sun than Uranus or you dont get the smooth profile, says Desch.

The new findings have other profound implications. The surface density of the solar nebula isnt what we originally thought it is actually much higher and this has implications for where we formed and for how fast planets grow. A higher surface density of the solar nebula means that Uranus and Neptune formed closer and faster, in only 10 million years instead of billions, says Desch. Thats important because Uranus and Neptune contain a few Earth masses of hydrogen and helium gas, and observations of other protoplanetary disks show these gases dont hang around for more than 10 million years.

In addition to demonstrating for the first time that all of the giant planets can grow within the lifetime of the solar nebula, Desch also uncovered the reason behind the sharp variation in density with distance from the Sun. The distribution of mass falls off very steeply because the outer edge is constantly being boiled away through the process of photoevaporation, by the ultraviolet radiation of nearby massive stars.

Previous to this, scientists had not considered the effects of photoevaporation on the mass distribution of the solar system. Deschs work shows that photoevaporation does move mass from the outer edge but at a fixed rate so it keeps it from spreading out too much, thus aiding planet growth.

So it seems that 4 billion years ago, My Very Educated Mother Just Served Nine Up Pizzas would have been the mnemonic to learn. Says Desch, This reminds us that the solar system is a dynamic place. For the first 650 million years of the solar system Neptune was closer to the sun than Uranus thats 15% of the history of the solar system. It looked completely different than we see it today.


Posted by: Sean    Source