Trajectory of the stellar flyby that shaped the outer Solar System
Abstract
Unlike the Solar System planets, thousands of smaller bodies beyond Neptune orbit the Sun on eccentric (e > 0.1 and i > 3°) orbits. While migration of the giant planets during the early stages of Solar System evolution could have induced substantial scattering of trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs), this process cannot account for the small number of distant TNOs (rp > 60 au) outside the planets' reach. The alternative scenario of the close flyby of another star can instead produce all these TNO features simultaneously, but the possible parameter space for such an encounter is vast. Here we compare observed TNO properties with thousands of flyby simulations to determine the specific properties of a flyby that reproduces all the different dynamical TNO populations, their locations and their relative abundances, and find that a 0 .8−0.1+0.1M⊙ star passing at a distance of rp = 110 ± 10 au, inclined by i = 70°
- Publication:
-
Nature Astronomy
- Pub Date:
- September 2024
- DOI:
- 10.1038/s41550-024-02349-x
- Bibcode:
- 2024NatAs.tmp..242P