Title of article :
Structure of the Earth’s circumsolar dust ring
Author/Authors :
Reach، نويسنده , , William T.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
3
From page :
848
To page :
850
Abstract :
Interplanetary dust particles from comets and asteroids pervade the Solar System and become temporarily trapped into orbital resonances with Earth, leading to a circumsolar dust ring. Using the unique vantage point of the Spitzer Space Telescope from its Earth-trailing solar orbit, we have measured for the first time the azimuthal structure of the Earth’s resonant dust ring. There is a relative paucity of particles within 0.1 AU of the Earth, followed by an enhancement in a cloud that is centered 0.2 AU behind Earth with a width of 0.08 AU along the Earth’s orbit. The North ecliptic pole is ∼3% brighter at 8 μm wavelength when viewed from inside the enhancement. The presence of azimuthal asymmetries in debris disks around other stars is considered strong evidence for planets. By measuring the properties of the Earth’s resonant ring, we can provide “ground truth” to models for interactions of planets and debris disks, possibly leading to improved predictions for detectability of life-bearing planets. The low amplitude of the azimuthal asymmetry in the Earth’s circumsolar ring suggests significant contributions to the zodiacal light from particles that are large (>30 μm) or have large orbital eccentricity that makes capture into mean motion resonances inefficient.
Keywords :
Interplanetary dust , Infrared observations , resonances , orbital
Journal title :
Icarus
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Icarus
Record number :
2377888
Link To Document :
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