4.7 Article

PLANETESIMAL INTERACTIONS CAN EXPLAIN THE MYSTERIOUS PERIOD RATIOS OF SMALL NEAR-RESONANT PLANETS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 803, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/803/1/33

Keywords

methods: numerical; methods: statistical; planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability; planets and satellites: formation; planets and satellites: general; planet-disk interactions

Funding

  1. NASA Origins of Solar Systems awards [NNX09AB35G, NNX13AF61G]
  2. NASA Applied Information Systems Research Program award [NXX09AM41G]
  3. Kepler Participating Scientist Program award [NNX12AF73Gm]
  4. University of Florida
  5. Pennsylvania State University Center for Exoplanets and Habitable Worlds
  6. CIERA fellowship at Northwestern University
  7. NASA [NNX13AF61G, 474917] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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An intriguing trend among Kepler's multi-planet systems is an overabundance of planet pairs with period ratios just wide of a mean motion resonance (MMR) and a dearth of systems just narrow of them. Traditional planet formation models are at odds with these observations. They are also in contrast with the period ratios of radial-velocity-discovered multi-planet systems which tend to pile up at 2:1 MMR. We propose that gas-disk migration traps planets in an MMR. After gas dispersal, orbits of these trapped planets are altered through interaction with a residual planetesimal disk. We study the effects of planetesimal disk interactions on planet pairs trapped in 2:1 MMR using planets of mass typical of the Kepler planet candidates and explore large ranges for the mass, and density profile of the planetesimal disk. We find that planet-planetesimal disk interactions naturally create the observed asymmetry in period-ratio distribution for large ranges of planetesimal disk and planet properties. If the planetesimal disk mass is above a threshold of approximate to 0.2x the planet mass, these interactions typically disrupt MMR. Afterwards, the planets migrate in such a way that the final period-ratio is slightly higher than the integer ratio corresponding to the initial MMR. Below this threshold these interactions typically cannot disrupt the resonance and the period ratio stays close to the integer ratio. The threshold explains why the more massive planet pairs found by RV surveys are still in resonance. We encourage future research to explore how significantly the associated accretion would change the planets' atmospheric and surface properties.

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