2016
DOI: 10.1080/21672857.2017.1279469
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Formation of exomoons: a solar system perspective

Abstract: Satellite formation is a natural by-product of planet formation. With the discovery of numerous extrasolar planets, it is likely that moons of extrasolar planets (exomoons) will soon be discovered. Some of the most promising techniques can yield both the mass and radius of the moon. Here, I review recent ideas about the formation of moons in our Solar System, and discuss the prospects of extrapolating these theories to predict the sizes of moons that may be discovered around extrasolar planets. It seems likely… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 140 publications
(275 reference statements)
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“…We begin to tackle this by considering the "soft" constraint that, for all solar system giant planets, the ratio of the satellites' total mass to that of the host planet, is 0.024% (Canup & Ward 2006;Barr 2017). As Triton itself is already ∼ 0.02% of the mass of Neptune, it is rea- sonable to expect exactly one large, Triton-sized moon with the remaining mass of surviving moons (Other Surviving Small Moons or OSSMs) being small enough so that Triton survives the ensuing collisional evolution.…”
Section: Aftermath: Evolution Of Circumneptunian Materials Post-encou...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We begin to tackle this by considering the "soft" constraint that, for all solar system giant planets, the ratio of the satellites' total mass to that of the host planet, is 0.024% (Canup & Ward 2006;Barr 2017). As Triton itself is already ∼ 0.02% of the mass of Neptune, it is rea- sonable to expect exactly one large, Triton-sized moon with the remaining mass of surviving moons (Other Surviving Small Moons or OSSMs) being small enough so that Triton survives the ensuing collisional evolution.…”
Section: Aftermath: Evolution Of Circumneptunian Materials Post-encou...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the assumption that one Triton-sized moon exists seems sensible at least mass-wise (Barr 2017;Szulágyi et al 2018), the number of smaller moons, a few tens, is estimated from the expectation that one Nereid should be created during the best encounters (those featuring the highest occurrence rates of TriAs & NerAs). A few tens of such moons, under these encounters, give rise to a NerA at an efficiency close to unity and, fortuitously, provide just the right amount of impacting mass to shrink the orbit of the TriA (its creation still a small-likelihood event) quickly enough to protect the NerA without disrupting the TriA.…”
Section: The Primordial Satellite Populationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most simulation studies of giant impacts have focused on the collisional phase space conductive to the formation of Solar system planets and satellites (Barr 2016). Despite an extensive collision simulation literature, there have only been a few studies that investigated hydrodynamical giant impact simulations relevant to exoplanets that are more massive than the Earth (Genda & Abe 2003;Marcus et al 2010a,b;Liu et al 2015;Inamdar & Schlichting 2015, 2016Barr & Bruck Syal 2017;Biersteker & Schlichting 2019). In particular, only Barr & Bruck Syal (2017) (hereafter BB17) focus on the formation of exosolar satellites (or rather the discs from which they accreted), while all the rest examine the effects on the exoplanets themselves.…”
Section: Collisional Formation Of Exomoonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moons can form similarly to planets, i.e. in the circumplanetary disk, or by collision (as it was probably the case for the Moon), or by binary-exchange which requires two bodies of comparable size that encounter a giant planet, which captures one of the binary bodies, while the other one is ejected (Barr 2016, Williams 2013).…”
Section: Formation Of Habitable Planetsmentioning
confidence: 99%