The supercomputer simulation of the planet and debris disk around Beta Pictoris shows that the planet's motion drives spiral waves throughout the disk, a phenomenon that causes collisions among the orbiting debris.
"We essentially created a virtual Beta Pictoris in the computer and watched it evolve over millions of years," said Erika Nesvold, an astrophysicist at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, who co-developed the simulation.
"This is the first full 3-D model of a debris disk where we can watch the development of asymmetric features formed by planets, like warps and eccentric rings, and also track collisions among the particles at the same time," Nesvold said.
In 2009, astronomers confirmed the existence of Beta Pictoris b, a planet with an estimated mass of about nine times Jupiter's, in the debris disk around Beta Pictoris.
Travelling along a tilted and slightly elongated 20-year orbit, the planet stays about as far away from its star as Saturn does from our Sun.
A common ingredient in comets, carbon monoxide molecules are destroyed by ultraviolet starlight in a few hundred years.
"Our simulation suggests many of these features can be readily explained by a pair of colliding spiral waves excited in the disk by the motion and gravity of Beta Pictoris b," said Marc Kuchner, an astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt.
Running simulations using the Discover supercomputer operated by the NASA Center for Climate Simulation at Goddard, researchers found that as the planet moves along its tilted path, it passes vertically through the disk twice each orbit.
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