Literature DB >> 33273743

Dynamical instabilities in systems of multiple short-period planets are likely driven by secular chaos: a case study of Kepler-102.

Kathryn Volk1, Renu Malhotra1.   

Abstract

We investigated the dynamical stability of high-multiplicity Kepler and K2 planetary systems. Our numerical simulations find instabilities in ~ 20% of the cases on a wide range of timescales (up to 5×109 orbits) and over an unexpectedly wide range of initial dynamical spacings. To identify the triggers of long-term instability in multi-planet systems, we investigated in detail the five-planet Kepler-102 system. Despite having several near-resonant period ratios, we find that mean motion resonances are unlikely to directly cause instability for plausible planet masses in this system. Instead, we find strong evidence that slow inward transfer of angular momentum deficit (AMD) via secular chaos excites the eccentricity of the innermost planet, Kepler-102 b, eventually leading to planet-planet collisions in ~ 80% of Kepler-102 simulations. Kepler-102 b likely needs a mass ≳ 0.1M ⊕, hence a bulk density exceeding about half Earth's, in order to avoid dynamical instability. To investigate the role of secular chaos in our wider set of simulations, we characterize each planetary system's AMD evolution with a "spectral fraction" calculated from the power spectrum of short integrations (~ 5 × 106 orbits). We find that small spectral fractions (≲ 0.01) are strongly associated with dynamical stability on long timescales (5 × 109 orbits) and that the median time to instability decreases with increasing spectral fraction. Our results support the hypothesis that secular chaos is the driver of instabilities in many non-resonant multi-planet systems, and also demonstrate that the spectral analysis method is an efficient numerical tool to diagnose long term (in)stability of multi-planet systems from short simulations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Exoplanet dynamics; Exoplanet systems; Exoplanets; Orbital evolution

Year:  2020        PMID: 33273743      PMCID: PMC7709759          DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aba0b0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astron J        ISSN: 0004-6256            Impact factor:   6.263


  4 in total

1.  Secular chaos and its application to Mercury, hot Jupiters, and the organization of planetary systems.

Authors:  Yoram Lithwick; Yanqin Wu
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-12-23       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Kepler planet-detection mission: introduction and first results.

Authors:  William J Borucki; David Koch; Gibor Basri; Natalie Batalha; Timothy Brown; Douglas Caldwell; John Caldwell; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; William D Cochran; Edna DeVore; Edward W Dunham; Andrea K Dupree; Thomas N Gautier; John C Geary; Ronald Gilliland; Alan Gould; Steve B Howell; Jon M Jenkins; Yoji Kondo; David W Latham; Geoffrey W Marcy; Søren Meibom; Hans Kjeldsen; Jack J Lissauer; David G Monet; David Morrison; Dimitar Sasselov; Jill Tarter; Alan Boss; Don Brownlee; Toby Owen; Derek Buzasi; David Charbonneau; Laurance Doyle; Jonathan Fortney; Eric B Ford; Matthew J Holman; Sara Seager; Jason H Steffen; William F Welsh; Jason Rowe; Howard Anderson; Lars Buchhave; David Ciardi; Lucianne Walkowicz; William Sherry; Elliott Horch; Howard Isaacson; Mark E Everett; Debra Fischer; Guillermo Torres; John Asher Johnson; Michael Endl; Phillip MacQueen; Stephen T Bryson; Jessie Dotson; Michael Haas; Jeffrey Kolodziejczak; Jeffrey Van Cleve; Hema Chandrasekaran; Joseph D Twicken; Elisa V Quintana; Bruce D Clarke; Christopher Allen; Jie Li; Haley Wu; Peter Tenenbaum; Ekaterina Verner; Frederick Bruhweiler; Jason Barnes; Andrej Prsa
Journal:  Science       Date:  2010-01-07       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Existence of collisional trajectories of Mercury, Mars and Venus with the Earth.

Authors:  J Laskar; M Gastineau
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2009-06-11       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Exoplanet orbital eccentricities derived from LAMOST-Kepler analysis.

Authors:  Ji-Wei Xie; Subo Dong; Zhaohuan Zhu; Daniel Huber; Zheng Zheng; Peter De Cat; Jianning Fu; Hui-Gen Liu; Ali Luo; Yue Wu; Haotong Zhang; Hui Zhang; Ji-Lin Zhou; Zihuang Cao; Yonghui Hou; Yuefei Wang; Yong Zhang
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-09-26       Impact factor: 11.205

  4 in total
  1 in total

1.  Predicting the long-term stability of compact multiplanet systems.

Authors:  Daniel Tamayo; Miles Cranmer; Samuel Hadden; Hanno Rein; Peter Battaglia; Alysa Obertas; Philip J Armitage; Shirley Ho; David N Spergel; Christian Gilbertson; Naireen Hussain; Ari Silburt; Daniel Jontof-Hutter; Kristen Menou
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-07-16       Impact factor: 11.205

  1 in total

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