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Thu, Apr 23, 2009

ANN's Daily Aero-Term (04.23.09):

Aero-Terms!

Aero-Terms are designed to be a daily reminder of the terms, names, acronyms and explanations of the unique language that populates the aviation world. Aerospace, sport aviation, fixed wing, helo, you name it... it's all fair game.

Aero-Terms should serve as a quick but intriguing reminder of the terms you may use every day, or an introduction to an aspects of the Aero-World you may not yet be familiar with. ANN also encourages readers to go beyond the FMI link, and further research any intriguing terms.

Suggestions for future Aero-Terms are ALWAYS welcome, as are additions or discussion of the explanations given for each Aero-Term.

Eccentric Jovians

Extrasolar planets, with a mass similar to or greater than that of Jupiter, which move around their host stars in highly elongated orbits. They include the planetary companions of 70 Virginis, 16 Cygni B and, possibly, HD 114762, which range in mass from 1.74 to 10 times that of Jupiter and in orbital eccentricity from about 0.25 to 0.68. The discovery of these objects, together with that of another unexpected class of extrasolar planets, the epistellar jovians, has prompted a revision of contemporary theories about how planets are formed (see planetary systems, formation).1 According to one new hypothesis, the gravitational forces exerted by protoplanets on the material of the surrounding protoplanetary disk create alternating spiral density waves, like those which, on a much larger scale, give rise to the arms of a spiral galaxy. These waves then act back on the forming planets, pushing them out of their circular orbits into ones of higher eccentricity.

A second hypothesis assumes that, in some cases, a young planetary system starts out with several "super-planets", each one at least as massive as Jupiter. The powerful gravitational interactions between these giant worlds causes them to be thrown around, so that they may end up in highly eccentric orbits, some of them lying close to the central star, others much farther out. An interesting prediction of this model, therefore, which can be tested, is that a system containing one eccentric jovian close to the host star should contain at least one more massive planet, probably lying much further out.

FMI: http://wind.cc.whecn.edu/~marquard/astronomy/jovian.htm

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