Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес оригинального документа : http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~bradw/cv/papers/whiteIXO.pdf
Дата изменения: Thu Oct 8 23:15:39 2009
Дата индексирования: Tue Oct 2 07:05:44 2012
Кодировка:
X-ray Studies of Planetary Systems: An Astro2010 Decadal Survey White Pap er
Eric Feigelson1 , Jeremy Drake6 , Ronald Elsner2 , Alfred Glassgold3 , Manuel Gudel4 , Thierry Ё 5 7 6 6 Montmerle , Takaya Ohashi , Randall Smith , Bradford Wargelin , and Scott Wolk6
1

Pennsylvania State University, 2 NASA's Marshal l Space Flight Center, 3 University of California, Berkeley, 4 Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, 5 Laboratoire Ё 6 d'Astrophysique de Grenoble, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics 7 Tokyo Metropolitan University


1.

Introduction

It may seem counterintuitive that X-ray astronomy should give any insights into planetary systems: planets, and their natal protoplanetary disks (PPDs), have temperatures which are far to o co ol (100 - 1500 K) to emit X-rays. However, planets orbit stars whose magnetized surfaces divert a small fraction of the stellar energy into high energy pro ducts: coronal UV and X-rays, flare X-rays and energetic particles, and a high-velo city stellar wind. In our Solar System, these components from the active Sun interact with the co ol orbiting bo dies to pro- Fig. 1.-- Protoplanetary disk il luminated duce X-rays through various pro cesses includ- by flare X-rays and its effects on disk ioning charge-exchange between ionized and neu- ization. tral components. The resulting X-ray emission gives unique insights into the solar activity, planetary atmospheres, cometary comae, charge exchange physics, and space weather across the Solar System (review by Bhardwa j et al. 2007). Solar-type stars also universally exhibit enhanced magnetic activity during their youth. X-ray emitting flares in pre-main sequence stars are 100 - 10,000в more powerful and frequent than in older stars like to day's Sun, and this emission only gradually declines over the first billion years on the main sequence (reviews by Feigelson et al. 2007; Gudel 2007). The XЁ rays and energetic particles from flares will irradiate protoplanetary disk gases and solids (review by Glassgold et al. 2000). As a result, it is possible that the stellar activity of young stars will substantially affect PPDs and planet formation processes by heating disk outer layers, pro ducing reactive ion-molecular species, inducing disk turbulence via ionization, and explaining conundrums in the meteoritic and cometary record such as isotopic anomalies, chondrule melting, and radial mixing (see Figure 1). Later, X-ray and ultraviolet irradiation will speed evaporation of planetary atmospheres and thereby perhaps affect planet habitability. Discoveries of X-rays from Solar System bo dies were made with the full range of Xray astronomical satellite observatories over the past three decades, from the discovery of Jupiter's emission with the Einstein Observatory and cometary comae with ROSAT to the study to day of planets and mo ons with the Chandra X-ray Observatory and XMM-Newton. X-rays from young stars are now investigated in thousands of pre-main sequence stars in the nearby Galaxy. To day, 40 papers/year are published on the observations and implications of X-ray emission relating to planetary science. But the X-ray emission is faint, time variable and spectrally complex - to day's instrumentation can achieve only a small portion of the potential scientific advances in planetary sciences. The planned high-throughput International X-ray Observatory (IXO) will propel this nascent field forward. We highlight here five studies in planetary science done using X-ray observations. These


studies address in unique ways several of NASA's strategic goals (Science Mission Directorate 2006) concerning the effects of the Sun on its planets, the physics of planetary ionospheres and ion-neutral interactions, the role of stellar activity on planet habitability, and on the formation pro cesses of planetary systems around young stars. These studies will complement NASA's strong program on Solar System exploration, extrasolar planet discovery, and planet formation environments. 2. Probing protoplanetary disks with the iron fluorescent line

The 19th century insights into the origin of our Solar System involving gravitational collapse of cold gas with angular momentum have been validated in recent decades by the profound discoveries of infrared-emitting PPDs disks around nascent stars in nearby star forming regions and discoveries of extrasolar planetary systems around a significant fraction of older stars in the solar neighborho o d. However, a number of enigmatic phenomena have been noted which indicate that non-equilibrium high energy pro cesses play some role in planet formation. Laboratory study of meteorites and Stardust cometary material, which record pro cesses in the planetesimal stage of our protoplanetary disk 4.567 Gyr ago, reveal flashmelted chondrules, calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions and free-floating grains with daughter pro ducts of short-lived spallogenic radionuclides, and composites with annealed or glassy components (reviews by Connolly et al. 2006; Chaussidon & Gounelle 2006). Infrared spectroscopic studies of some distant PPDs with NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope reveal heated and ionized gaseous outer layers (reviews by Na jita et al. 2007; Bergin et al. 2007). While some of these phenomena can be attributed to the effects of violent events which precede gravitational collapse (such as supernova explosions), others require irradiation of disks by the X-rays and energetic particles from magnetic reconnection flares around the host young star. X-ray ionization should dominate cosmic ray ionization by several orders of magnitude (Glassgold et al. 2000). X-ray astronomers are thus joining the vibrant community of meteoriticists, infrared and millimeter spectroscopists, and theorists seeking to understand non-equilibrium processes during the protoplanetary disk stage of planet formation. A particularly important consequence of X-ray irradiation of PPDs is the predicted induction of MHD turbulence by coupling the slightly-ionized gas to magnetic fields in a sheared Keplerian velo city field via the magneto-rotational instability. Harder X-rays (> 10 keV) from powerful flares can penetrate deeply into protoplanetary disks, and may reach the PPD midplane where planets form. Astrophysicists are enormously interested in the possibility of turbulent PPDs as it appears to solve certain problems (e.g. gas viscosity needed for accretion, inhibition of Type I migration of larger protoplanets) while it raises other problems (e.g. inhibition of grain settling to the disk midplane, promotion of shattering rather than merger of small solid bo dies). Stellar X-rays may also be responsible for the ionization needed to propel collimated protostellar bipolar outflows, for the evaporation of icy mantles in PPD grains, and for ion-molecular chemical reactions in the disks. X-rays may play a critical role in the photo evaporation and dissipation of older protoplanetary disks (Ercolano et al. 2008). Figure 1 illustrates various aspects of an X-ray illuminated PPD.


1

Flare
Flux (counts/sec/keV) 0.1 Rate (counts/s)

0.01

1

Chandra Flare Spectrum

~6.4 keV ~6.7keV

01

IXO Flare Spectrum
0.1
2 4 6 Energy (keV) 8

10

-3

0

20

40 60 Time (ksec)

80

100

Fig. 2.-- Chandra light curve [Left] and CCD spectrum [Midd le] showing the Fe 6.4 keV fluorescent line during a powerful flare from the protostar YLW 16A in the nearby Ophiuchi cloud (Imanishi et al. 2001). The high-ionization emission lines (6.7 keV) arise from the hot plasma confined in the flaring magnetic loop. [Right] Simulation of a 2 ks IXO XMS spectrum at the onset of the YLW 16A flare showing the Fe 6.4 keV fluorescent line. IXO wil l be able to see flares 100x fainter than currently possible. The strongest test of X-ray irradiation of PPDs is the fluorescent iron line at 6.4 keV, which is well-known to appear when a hard X-ray continuum from a central source illuminates co ol disk material (e.g., in enshrouded active galactic nuclei and X-ray binary systems). The 6.4 keV emission line has been seen in a few flaring protostellar systems (see Figure 2) but typically lies beyond the sensitivity limit of current instrumentation. With the 200 times improved sensitivity in the fluorescent line compared to Chandra and XMM-Newton, the IXO X-ray Micro calorimeter Spectrometer (XMS) detector will detect (or place strong constraints on) X-ray irradiation in hundreds of PPDs in the nearby Ophiuchus, Taurus, Perseus and Orion star forming clouds. The IXO Hard X-ray Imager (HXI) will separately establish the intensity of deeply-penetrating X-rays in the 10 - 30 keV band needed to calculate PPD turbulent and "dead" zones. Prior to IXO's launch, the molecular and dust properties of these disks will be well-characterized by the Spitzer, Herschel and James Webb missions and ALMA telescope. By correlation of X-ray, molecular and solid properties in these systems, IXO should clearly establish the role of X-ray illumination on PPD physics and chemistry. It is not impossible that diversity in X-ray irradiation plays a critical role in the diversity of exoplanetary systems seen around older stars.

3.

The complex X-ray emission of Jupiter and Mars

Jupiter is the most luminous X-ray emitter in the Solar System after the Sun. Its emission is complex with several spatially and temporally varying components: charge exchange lines from interaction with solar wind ions, fluorescence and scattering of solar X-rays, and a hard electron brems-strahlung emission (Bhardwa j et al. 2007). Charge exchange is the dominant pro cess where heavy solar energetic ions collide with neutral atoms in the planetary atmosphere, pro ducing a radiative cascade of non-thermal emission lines (e.g. from the n = 5 state of hydrogenic O7+ at 0.653 keV). In planets like Earth and Jupiter with a strong dipolar


Flux (10-4 ph/cm2/s/A) 0.5 1.0

Disk + Charge Exchange
Fe XVII Fe XVII

O VIII Ly

O VIIr O VIIf

O VIII Ly

O VIII Ly omitted for scale O VII He

O VII He O VII

O VIIi

O VIII Ly

O VII He

O VII He O VIII Ly O VIII Ly O VII He

O VIIr O VIIf

O VIII Ly O VII He O VIII Ly

O VIIi

0

14

16

18 20 Wavelength (A)

22

Fig. 4.-- [Left] XMM-Newton spectrum of Jupiter (blue) and a (red) consisting of auroral charge-exchange lines, solar reflection tron bremsstrahlung continuum(Branduardi-Raymont et al. 2007). 50 ks IXO spectrum based on the XMM-Newton emission model sho exchange emission lines; many more lines are expected. magnetic field, these X-ray components are and south magnetic poles (see Figure 3). the dominant X-ray emitting pro cess from in CO2 and wind ions are not concentrat High-amplitude variations on timescales of components.

three-component model continuum, hard elec[Right] Simulation of a wing the oxygen charge-

concentrated in auroral regions around the north K-shell fluorescence from carbon and oxygen is Venus and Mars where the atmospheres are rich ed toward the poles by strong magnetic fields. minutes-to-hours can be present in these X-ray

Figure 4 shows the best spectra from Jupiter currently available. The IXO spectrum will reveal hundreds of lines with sufficient signal to map the upper atmosphere through the planet's 36 ks rotational perio d. Repeated visits, particularly at different perio ds in the solar 11-year activity cycle and several days after powerful solar flares, should show varying ratios of the different emis- Fig. 3.-- XMM-Newton images of Jupiter in the chargesion components elucidating the exchange O VII [left] and fluorescent Fe XVII [right] complex physics of solar-planetary lines. interactions. An IXO study of Mars may be particularly important for understanding the evaporative effect of solar X-rays and extreme ultraviolet emission on planetary atmospheres. Martian X-ray emission is dominated by a uniform disk of scattered solar radiation (Mars subtends 18 at opposition). But remarkably, a faint halo of soft charge exchange lines with unexplained spatial substructure is seen out to 8 planetary radii (Figure 5, Dennerl 2002).


This exceedingly faint X-ray component gives a unique view into planetary is inaccessible at other wavelengths. When observed with IXO under a var and flare conditions, the Martian exosphere may provide critical evidence interactions between stellar X-ray and ultraviolet emission and planetary deed, it is possible that Mars' atmosphere is so thin to day due to these magnetic activity was greatly elevated 4 Gyr ago. 4. Cometary charge exchange

exospheres which iety of solar wind into the complex atmospheres. Ineffect when solar

During their perihelion approach to the Sun, cometary ices (mostly water) are evaporated into a large neutral coma which pro duces strong charge exchange reactions when it interacts with highly-charged solar wind ions (Cravens 1997). X-ray studies provide unique information on this wind-coma interaction region giving insights into charge exchange pro cesses, wind-coma hydro dynamics, and cometary outgassing. Interpretation of cometary X-ray spectra to day is complicated as it depends on the solar wind velo city, density and composition, as well as wind ion penetration into the coma, Fig. 5.-- Image of Mars in X-rays ion-molecular cross-sections, and collisional opacity. These derived from XMM-Newton obserissues can be elucidated by IXO XMS studies (note vations: charge exchange O+6 -O+7 that grating observations are not feasible due to the lines in blue, C+4 -C+5 lines in 14 spatial extent). X-ray luminosities range from 10 - green, and fluorescent lines in yel1016 erg/s depending primarily on the comets' encounlow (Dennerl 2006). ters with different solar wind states (Bo dewits et al. 2007). Several perio dic comets and an unknown number of distant comets will enter perihelion during the IXO mission. Spectra will resolve about a dozen charge-exchange emission lines from oxygen above 0.5 keV, and dozens of lines from other elements. Line ratios will change with cometary gas species, solar wind ion composition and wind speed. 5. Heliospheric charge exchange

X-ray astronomers have increasingly recognized that a significant fraction of the all-sky soft X-ray background arises from time-dependent heliospheric charge-exchange reactions between highly ionized solar wind atoms and interstellar neutrals which penetrate deeply into the heliosphere (Snowden et al. 2004). This has profound implications for our understanding of the Lo cal Hot Bubble and the structure of the Galactic interstellar medium. Earlier X-ray missions also suffer from contamination by charge exchange emission within the terrestrial magnetosphere (Wargelin et al. 2004), but IXO will avoid this component from its lo cation at the Earth-Sun L2 Lagrangian point. From study of the background of dozens of observations with different lines-of-sight through the heliosphere under different solar wind conditions, IXO spectra should provide powerful insights into heliospheric physics and its interactions with its ambient Galactic medium.


6.

Atmosphere evaporation in extrasolar planets

Past studies of solar-type stars indicate that X-ray luminosities drop roughly 10-fold between ages of 107 and 108 yr, another 10-fold between 108 and 109 yr, and more rapidly between 109 and 1010 yr (Preibisch & Feigelson 2005). This enhanced X-ray emission during early epo chs, and the asso ciated extreme ultraviolet emission which is more difficult to study in young stars, will disso ciate and ionize molecules in planetary thermospheres and exospheres so that light atoms escape into the interplanetary medium (Gudel 2007; Penz, Micela & Ё Lammer 2008). Solar wind and flare particles may also ero de the entire atmosphere if no magnetic field is present. These pro cesses were probably important on Venus, Earth and Mars during the first 108 yr and are presently leading to hydro dynamics escape of the atmospheres in extrasolar "hot Jupiters." The atmospheric conditions, and hence the habitability, of planets may thus be regulated in part by the evolution of the ultraviolet and X-ray emission of their host stars. Thousands of extrasolar planets will be known by 2020 through NASA's Kepler mission and other planetary search programs. IXO can measure both the quiescent and flare activity of specific stars which will be known to have planets in their habitable zones. Combined with stellar activity evolutionary trends and planetary atmospheric mo deling, IXO findings should give unique insights into the atmospheric history of these potentially habitable planets.

7.

Summary

X-ray studies of planetary systems are beginning to provide important insights into planetary astrophysics which are inaccessible at other wavelengths. X-ray observations of the host stars reveal the high-energy inputs to protoplanetary disks and planetary atmospheres due to stellar winds and violent magnetic flaring. X-rays from Solar System planets are faint but reveal considerable complexity, a situation well-matched to IXO's high-throughput and high spectral resolution. Charge exchange line emission from interactions between solar wind ions and atmospheric neutrals, along with other pro cesses, are seen in the atmospheres of Jupiter, comets and other Solar System bo dies. The X-ray discovery of the Martian exosphere points to evaporation of planetary atmospheres unprotected by magnetic fields, which may play an important role in the habitability of planets. X-ray and infrared spectroscopic studies of protoplanetary disks show that X-ray ionization is present, and theoretical calculations indicate its importance to disk thermo dynamics, chemistry and dynamics. It is possible that X-ray illumination is a critical regulator to the formation and early evolution of planets in the disk, but higher sensitivity is needed to study the crucial 6.4 keV fluorescent line. Xray studies of cometary coma charge exchange, charge exchange distributed throughout the heliosphere, and of stars hosting extrasolar planets are examples of a wealth of IXO studies which will revolutionize this field.


REFERENCES
Bergin, E. A., Aikawa, Y., Blake, G. A., & van Dishoeck, E. F. 2007, in Protostars and Planets V, 751 Bhardwa j, A., Elsner, R. F., Gladstone, R. G., et al. 2007, Planet. Space Sci., 55, 1135 Bodewits, D., Christian, D. J., Torney, M., et al. 2007, A&A, 469, 1183 Branduardi-Raymont, G., Bhardwa j, A., Elsner, R. F., et al. 2007, A&A, 463, 761 Chaussidon, M., & Gounelle, M. 2006, in Meteorites and the Early Solar System I I, 323 Connolly, H. C., Jr., Desch, S. J., Ash, R. D., & Jones, R. H. 2006, in Meteorites and the Early Solar System I I, 383 Cravens, T. E. 1997, Geophys. Res. Lett., 24, 105 Dennerl, K. 2002, A&A, 394, 1119 Dennerl, K. 2006, Space Sci. Rev. 126, 403 Ercolano, B., Drake, J. J., Raymond, J. C., & Clarke, C. C. 2008, ApJ, 688, 398 Feigelson, E., Townsley, L., Gudel, M., & Stassun, K. 2007, in Protostars and Planets V, 313 Ё Glassgold, A. E., Feigelson, E. D., & Montmerle, T. 2000, in Protostars and Planets IV, 429 Gudel, M. 2007, Living Reviews Solar Phys., 4, 3 Ё Imanishi, K., Tsujimoto, M., & Koyama, K. 2001, ApJ, 563, 361 Na jita, J. R., Carr, J. S., Glassgold, A. E., & Valenti, J. A. 2007, in Protostars and Planets V, 507 Penz, T., Micela, G. & Lammer, H. 2008, A&A 477, 309 Preibisch, T., & Feigelson, E. D. 2005, ApJS, 160, 390 Science Plan for NASA's Science Mission Directorate 2007-2016 Snowden, S. L., Collier, M. R., & Kuntz, K. D. 2004, ApJ, 610, 1182 Wargelin, B. J., Markevitch, M., Juda, M., et al. 2004, ApJ, 607, 596