论文标题
关于恒星簇中共振和非谐振行星系统的生存
On the survival of resonant and non-resonant planetary systems in star clusters
论文作者
论文摘要
尽管近年来发现了成千上万的系外行星,但星团中已知的系外行星的数量仍然很小。这可能是由于紧密的恒星遇到这些簇中行星系统的动态演变的结果。在这里,我们介绍了直接$ n $ n $ body仿真的多层型系统的嵌入在星团中的$ n = 8k,16k,32k $和$ 64k $ $ start的星团。行星系统由四个太阳系巨型行星木星,土星,天王星和海王星组成,以不同的轨道配置初始化,以研究系统体系结构对整个行星系统动态演化的影响以及单个星球的逃生速率。我们发现,太阳系巨头的当前轨道参数(最初具有圆形轨道,以及当今的偏心率)和稍微紧凑的配置,对出色的扰动具有很高的弹性。在行星之间,具有3:2、3:2和5:4的初始平均动力共振的配置是受良好模型的启发,并且通常在第一个$ 10^5 $ yr之内弹出两个最外部的行星,在许多情况下,由于外部出色的扰动驱动率稳定在许多情况下,这是稳定的。分配所有行星相同的质量为1个jovian质量几乎均等生存部分。我们的模拟在观察到的系外行星系统中重现了广泛的多样性。我们不仅发现许多非常宽的和/或偏心轨道,而且还发现大量(稳定的)逆行轨道。
Despite the discovery of thousands of exoplanets in recent years, the number of known exoplanets in star clusters remains tiny. This may be a consequence of close stellar encounters perturbing the dynamical evolution of planetary systems in these clusters. Here, we present the results from direct $N$-body simulations of multiplanetary systems embedded in star clusters containing $N = 8k, 16k, 32k$, and $64k$ stars. The planetary systems, which consist of the four Solar system giant planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, are initialized in different orbital configurations, to study the effect of the system architecture on the dynamical evolution of the entire planetary system, and on the escape rate of the individual planets. We find that the current orbital parameters of the Solar system giants (with initially circular orbits, as well as with present-day eccentricities) and a slightly more compact configuration, have a high resilience against stellar perturbations. A configuration with initial mean-motion resonances of 3:2, 3:2, and 5:4 between the planets, which is inspired by the Nice model, and for which the two outermost planets are usually ejected within the first $10^5$ yr, is in many cases stabilized due to the removal of the resonances by external stellar perturbation and by the rapid ejection of at least one planet. Assigning all planets the same mass of 1 Jovian mass almost equalizes the survival fractions. Our simulations reproduce the broad diversity amongst observed exoplanet systems. We find not only many very wide and/or eccentric orbits, but also a significant number of (stable) retrograde orbits.