In astronomy, a disrupted planet is a planet or exoplanet or, perhaps on a somewhat smaller scale, a planetary-mass object, planetesimal, moon, exomoon or asteroid that has been disrupted or destroyed by a nearby or passing astronomical body or object such as a star. Necroplanetology is the related study of such a process.

The result of such a disruption may be the production of excessive amounts of related gas, dust and debris, which may eventually surround the parent star in the form of a circumstellar disk or debris disk. As a consequence, the orbiting debris field may be an "uneven ring of dust", causing erratic light fluctuations in the apparent luminosity of the parent star, as may have been responsible for the oddly flickering light curves associated with the starlight observed from certain variable stars, such as that from Tabby's Star (KIC 8462852), RZ Piscium and WD 1145 017. Excessive amounts of infrared radiation may be detected from such stars, suggestive evidence in itself that dust and debris may be orbiting the stars.

Examples

Planets

Examples of planets, or their related remnants, considered to have been a disrupted planet, or part of such a planet, include: ‘Oumuamua and WD 1145 017 b, as well as asteroids, hot Jupiters and those that are hypothetical planets, like Fifth planet, Phaeton, Planet V and Theia. Planets can also be disrupted by black holes; one example involves a "Jupiter-like object" being subject to a tidal disruption event by the supermassive black hole IGR J12580 0134, at the center of the galaxy NGC 4845.

Stars

Examples of parent stars considered to have disrupted a planet include: EPIC 204278916, Tabby's Star (KIC 8462852), PDS 110, RZ Piscium, WD 1145 017 and 47 Ursae Majoris.

Tabby's Star light curve

Tabby's Star (KIC 8462852) is an F-type main-sequence star exhibiting unusual light fluctuations, including up to a 22% dimming in brightness. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain these irregular changes, but none to date fully explain all aspects of the curve. One explanation is that an "uneven ring of dust" orbits Tabby's Star. However, in September 2019, astronomers reported that the observed dimmings of Tabby's Star may have been produced by fragments resulting from the disruption of an orphaned exomoon.

See also

References

Further reading

  • Wallace Gary Ernst (1990). The Dynamic Planet. Columbia University Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-231-07231-1.
  • Michael M. Woolfson (2000). The Origin and Evolution of the Solar System. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4200-3335-9.

External links

  • NASA – WD 1145 017 b at The Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia.
  • Video (13:46) − "Tabby's Star" on YouTube, a presentation by Tabetha S. Boyajian.
  • Video (31:00) − "Tabby's Star" on YouTube, a presentation by Issac Arthur.
  • Video (01:00) − RZ Piscium on YouTube, star with unusual light fluctuations (21 December 2017).

3d illustration of the destruction of the stylized earth

deflated earth balloon StockFoto Adobe Stock

Earth ablaze, American continents spared amidst global nuclear

Destroyed earth, exploded, hollowed, and scattered debris

Destroyed