Secular Perturbations from Exterior Giants Strongly Influence Gap Complexity in Peas-in-a-Pod Exoplanetary Systems
It has been demonstrated that systems of tightly packed inner planets with giant exterior companions tend to have less regular orbital spacings than those without such companions. We investigate whether this observed increase in the gap complexity of the inner systems can be explained solely as the...
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Zusammenfassung: | It has been demonstrated that systems of tightly packed inner planets with
giant exterior companions tend to have less regular orbital spacings than those
without such companions. We investigate whether this observed increase in the
gap complexity of the inner systems can be explained solely as the result of
secular dynamics caused by the disturbing potential of the exterior companions.
Amplification of mutual orbital inclinations in the inner system due to such
secular dynamics may lead to the inner system attaining non-mutually transiting
geometries, thereby creating artificial observed gaps that result in a higher
calculated gap complexity. Using second-order secular theory, we compute
time-averaged observed gap complexities along a favorable line of sight for a
set of hypothetical systems, both with and without an outer giant. We find that
these secular interactions can significantly contribute to the observed gap
complexity dichotomy in tightly packed multiple-planet systems. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.18661 |