Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I: Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes

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Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I : Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes. / Lissauer, Jack J.; Gavino, Sacha.

I: Icarus, Bind 364, 114470, 08.2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lissauer, JJ & Gavino, S 2021, 'Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I: Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes', Icarus, bind 364, 114470. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114470

APA

Lissauer, J. J., & Gavino, S. (2021). Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I: Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes. Icarus, 364, [114470]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114470

Vancouver

Lissauer JJ, Gavino S. Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I: Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes. Icarus. 2021 aug.;364. 114470. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114470

Author

Lissauer, Jack J. ; Gavino, Sacha. / Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I : Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes. I: Icarus. 2021 ; Bind 364.

Bibtex

@article{3de05e860026435da1c0a181a927143e,
title = "Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I: Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes",
abstract = "We explore the orbital dynamics of systems consisting of three planets, each as massive as the Earth, on coplanar, initially circular, orbits about a star of one solar mass. The initial semimajor axes of the planets are equally spaced in terms of their mutual Hill radius, which is equivalent to a geometric progression of orbital periods for small planets of equal mass. Our simulations explore a wide range of spacings of the planets, and were integrated for virtual times of up to 10 billion years or until the orbits of any pair of planets crossed. We find the same general trend of system lifetimes increasing exponentially with separation between orbits seen by previous studies of systems of three or more planets. One focus of this paper is to go beyond the rough trends found by previous numerical studies and quantitatively explore the nature of the scatter in lifetimes and the destabilizing effects of mean motion resonances. In contrast to previous results for five-planet systems, a nontrivial fraction of three-planet systems survive at least several orders of magnitude longer than most other systems with similar initial separation between orbits, with some surviving 1010 years at much smaller orbital separations than any found for five-planet systems. Substantial shifts in the initial planetary longitudes cause a scatter of roughly a factor of two in system lifetime, whereas the shift of one planet's initial position by 100 m along its orbit results in smaller changes in the logarithm of the time to orbit crossing, especially for systems with short lifetimes.",
keywords = "Exoplanets, Numerical, Planetary systems, Planets and satellites, Dynamical evolution and stability, RESONANCE OVERLAP, PLANETS, MASS, INSTABILITY",
author = "Lissauer, {Jack J.} and Sacha Gavino",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114470",
language = "English",
volume = "364",
journal = "Icarus",
issn = "0019-1035",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Orbital stability of compact three-planet systems, I

T2 - Dependence of system lifetimes on initial orbital separations and longitudes

AU - Lissauer, Jack J.

AU - Gavino, Sacha

PY - 2021/8

Y1 - 2021/8

N2 - We explore the orbital dynamics of systems consisting of three planets, each as massive as the Earth, on coplanar, initially circular, orbits about a star of one solar mass. The initial semimajor axes of the planets are equally spaced in terms of their mutual Hill radius, which is equivalent to a geometric progression of orbital periods for small planets of equal mass. Our simulations explore a wide range of spacings of the planets, and were integrated for virtual times of up to 10 billion years or until the orbits of any pair of planets crossed. We find the same general trend of system lifetimes increasing exponentially with separation between orbits seen by previous studies of systems of three or more planets. One focus of this paper is to go beyond the rough trends found by previous numerical studies and quantitatively explore the nature of the scatter in lifetimes and the destabilizing effects of mean motion resonances. In contrast to previous results for five-planet systems, a nontrivial fraction of three-planet systems survive at least several orders of magnitude longer than most other systems with similar initial separation between orbits, with some surviving 1010 years at much smaller orbital separations than any found for five-planet systems. Substantial shifts in the initial planetary longitudes cause a scatter of roughly a factor of two in system lifetime, whereas the shift of one planet's initial position by 100 m along its orbit results in smaller changes in the logarithm of the time to orbit crossing, especially for systems with short lifetimes.

AB - We explore the orbital dynamics of systems consisting of three planets, each as massive as the Earth, on coplanar, initially circular, orbits about a star of one solar mass. The initial semimajor axes of the planets are equally spaced in terms of their mutual Hill radius, which is equivalent to a geometric progression of orbital periods for small planets of equal mass. Our simulations explore a wide range of spacings of the planets, and were integrated for virtual times of up to 10 billion years or until the orbits of any pair of planets crossed. We find the same general trend of system lifetimes increasing exponentially with separation between orbits seen by previous studies of systems of three or more planets. One focus of this paper is to go beyond the rough trends found by previous numerical studies and quantitatively explore the nature of the scatter in lifetimes and the destabilizing effects of mean motion resonances. In contrast to previous results for five-planet systems, a nontrivial fraction of three-planet systems survive at least several orders of magnitude longer than most other systems with similar initial separation between orbits, with some surviving 1010 years at much smaller orbital separations than any found for five-planet systems. Substantial shifts in the initial planetary longitudes cause a scatter of roughly a factor of two in system lifetime, whereas the shift of one planet's initial position by 100 m along its orbit results in smaller changes in the logarithm of the time to orbit crossing, especially for systems with short lifetimes.

KW - Exoplanets

KW - Numerical

KW - Planetary systems

KW - Planets and satellites

KW - Dynamical evolution and stability

KW - RESONANCE OVERLAP

KW - PLANETS

KW - MASS

KW - INSTABILITY

U2 - 10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114470

DO - 10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114470

M3 - Journal article

VL - 364

JO - Icarus

JF - Icarus

SN - 0019-1035

M1 - 114470

ER -

ID: 270618115