4.7 Article

Effects of secular interactions in extrasolar planetary systems

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 649, Issue 2, Pages 992-1003

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/506142

Keywords

planetary systems

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This paper studies the effects of dynamical interactions among the planets in observed extrasolar planetary systems, including hypothetical additional bodies, with a focus on secular perturbations. These interactions cause the eccentricities of the planets to explore a distribution of values over timescales that are long compared to observational time baselines but short compared to the age of the systems. The same formalism determines the eccentricity forcing of hypothetical test bodies (terrestrial planets) in these systems, and we find which systems allow for potentially habitable planets. Such planets would be driven to nonzero orbital eccentricity and we derive the distribution of stellar flux experienced by the planets over the course of their orbits. The general relativistic corrections to secular interaction theory are included in the analysis, and such effects are important in systems with close planets (similar to 4 day orbits). Some extrasolar planetary systems (e.g., Y Andromedae) can be used as a test of general relativity, whereas in other systems, general relativity can be used to constrain the system parameters (e.g., sin i greater than or similar to 0.93 for HD 160691). For the case of hot Jupiters we discuss how the absence of observed eccentricity implies the absence of companion planets.

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