International audienceExoplanet surveys have confirmed one of humanity's (and all teenagers') worst fears: we are weird. If our Solar System were observed with present-day Earth technology -- to put our system and exoplanets on the same footing -- Jupiter is the only planet that would be detectable. The statistics of exo-Jupiters indicate that the Solar System is unusual at the ~1% level among Sun-like stars (or ~0.1% among all stars). But why are we different? Successful formation models for both the Solar System and exoplanet systems rely on two key processes: orbital migration and dynamical instability. Systems of close-in super-Earths or sub-Neptunes require substantial radial inward motion of solids either as drifting mm- to cm-sized p...
Giant planets migrate though the protoplanetary disc as they grow their solid core and attract their...
Giant planets migrate though the protoplanetary disc as they grow. We investigate how the formation ...
to be published in "Planets, Stars and Stellar Systems", P. Kalas and L. French (eds.)The apparent r...
Exoplanet surveys have confirmed one of humanity's (and all teenagers') worst fears: we are weird. I...
The statistics of extrasolar planetary systems indicate that the default mode of planet formation ge...
The past decade has seen major progress in our understanding of terrestrial planet formation. Yet ke...
Circumstantial evidence suggests that most known extra-solar planetary systems are survivors of viol...
Advancing our understanding of planet formation is a prime motivation for the search for exoplanets....
International audiencePlanets of 1-4 times Earth's size on orbits shorter than 100 days exist around...
The recent discoveries of extrasolar giant planets (planets like Jupiter orbiting other stars like o...
International audiencePrevious simulations of planet formation utilizing single bodies including peb...
For centuries, our knowledge of planetary systems and ideas about planet formation were based on a s...
There exists strong circumstantial evidence from their eccentric orbits that most of the known giant...
Models of planet formation are built on underlying physical processes. In order to make sense of the...
Exo-planet migration is assumed to have occurred to explain close-to-star gas giant exo-planets with...
Giant planets migrate though the protoplanetary disc as they grow their solid core and attract their...
Giant planets migrate though the protoplanetary disc as they grow. We investigate how the formation ...
to be published in "Planets, Stars and Stellar Systems", P. Kalas and L. French (eds.)The apparent r...
Exoplanet surveys have confirmed one of humanity's (and all teenagers') worst fears: we are weird. I...
The statistics of extrasolar planetary systems indicate that the default mode of planet formation ge...
The past decade has seen major progress in our understanding of terrestrial planet formation. Yet ke...
Circumstantial evidence suggests that most known extra-solar planetary systems are survivors of viol...
Advancing our understanding of planet formation is a prime motivation for the search for exoplanets....
International audiencePlanets of 1-4 times Earth's size on orbits shorter than 100 days exist around...
The recent discoveries of extrasolar giant planets (planets like Jupiter orbiting other stars like o...
International audiencePrevious simulations of planet formation utilizing single bodies including peb...
For centuries, our knowledge of planetary systems and ideas about planet formation were based on a s...
There exists strong circumstantial evidence from their eccentric orbits that most of the known giant...
Models of planet formation are built on underlying physical processes. In order to make sense of the...
Exo-planet migration is assumed to have occurred to explain close-to-star gas giant exo-planets with...
Giant planets migrate though the protoplanetary disc as they grow their solid core and attract their...
Giant planets migrate though the protoplanetary disc as they grow. We investigate how the formation ...
to be published in "Planets, Stars and Stellar Systems", P. Kalas and L. French (eds.)The apparent r...