Published December 2023 | Published
Journal Article

Radial distribution of distant trans-Neptunian objects points to Sun's formation in a stellar cluster

  • 1. ROR icon Southwest Research Institute
  • 2. ROR icon University of Washington
  • 3. ROR icon Charles University
  • 4. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

The Scattered Disk Objects (SDOs) are a population of trans-Neptunian bodies with semimajor axes 50<a≲1000 au and perihelion distances q≳30 au. The detached SDOs with orbits beyond the reach of Neptune (roughly q>35 au) are of special interest here as an important constraint on the early evolution of the outer Solar System. The semimajor axis profile of detached SDOs at 50–500 au, as characterized from the Dark Energy Survey (DES), is radially extended, but previous dynamical models of Neptune’s early migration produce a relatively compact profile. This problem is most likely related to Sun’s birth environment in a stellar cluster. We perform new dynamical simulations that account for cluster effects and show that the orbital distribution of SDOs can be explained if a particularly close stellar encounter occurred early on (e.g., M dwarf with the mass ≃0.2M⊙ approaching the Sun at ≃200 au). For such an encounter to happen with a reasonably high probability the Sun must have formed in a stellar cluster with ηT≳104 Myr pc−3, where η is the stellar number density and T is the Sun’s residence time in the cluster.

Copyright and License

© 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Acknowledgement

The work of DN was supported by the NASA Emerging Worlds program, United States. PHB acknowledges support from the DIRAC Institute in the Department of Astronomy at the University of Washington, United States. The DIRAC Institute is supported through generous gifts from the Charles and Lisa Simonyi Fund for Arts and Sciences, and the Washington Research Foundation. The work of DV was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (grant number 21–11058S). We thank Matt Clement and an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments on the submitted manuscript.

Data Availability

Data will be made available on request.

Additional details

Created:
February 4, 2025
Modified:
February 4, 2025