Chris Ormel, University of Amsterdam - 6.2.17
Abstract:
Super-Earths and mini-Neptunes -- planets made up mostly of heavy elements, but often inferred to harbour significant amounts of primordial (H/He) gas -- dominate the exoplanet census. Since they orbit their host stars at periods of around 10 days (~0.1 au), their formation must have proceeded very differently than the terrestrial planets in the solar system. Indeed, our classical ideas on how planet formation proceeds are ill-equipped to explain the super-Earth population. I will discuss some recent developments of my group that attempt to resolve these inconsistencies, reconciling modern planet formation theory with observational constraints. The topics that I will highlight include: disk-planet atmosphere recycling, star-disk-planet magnetic coupling, and long-term thermal modeling of super-Earths.