2020A&A...636A..53T


Query : 2020A&A...636A..53T

2020A&A...636A..53T - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 636A, 53-53 (2020/4-1)

Normalized angular momentum deficit: a tool for comparing the violence of the dynamical histories of planetary systems.

TURRINI D., ZINZI A. and BELINCHON J.A.

Abstract (from CDS):


Context. Population studies of the orbital characteristics of exoplanets in multi-planet systems have highlighted the existence of an anticorrelation between the average orbital eccentricity of planets and the number of planets of their host system, that is, its multiplicity. This effect was proposed to reflect the varying levels of violence in the dynamical evolution of planetary systems.
Aims. Previous work suggested that the relative violence of the dynamical evolution of planetary systems with similar orbital architectures can be compared through the computation of their angular momentum deficit (AMD). We investigated the possibility of using a more general metric to perform analogous comparisons between planetary systems with different orbital architectures.
Methods. We considered a modified version of the AMD, the normalized angular momentum deficit (NAMD), and used it to study a sample of 99 multi-planet systems containing both the currently best-characterized extrasolar systems and the solar system, that is, planetary systems with both compact and wide orbital architectures.
Results. We verified that the NAMD allows us to compare the violence of the dynamical histories of multi-planet systems with different orbital architectures. We identified an anticorrelation between the NAMD and the multiplicity of the planetary systems, of which the previously observed eccentricity-multiplicity anticorrelation is a reflection.
Conclusions. Our results seem to indicate that phases of dynamical instabilities and chaotic evolution are not uncommon among planetary systems. They also suggest that the efficiency of the planetary formation process in producing high-multiplicity systems is likely to be higher than that suggested by their currently known population.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2020

Journal keyword(s): planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability - celestial mechanics - methods: data analysis

Simbad objects: 12

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Number of rows : 12
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 HD 15337 EB* 02 27 28.3781273256 -27 38 06.736755624   9.95 9.09     K1V 92 0
2 * nu.02 CMa PM* 06 36 41.0376788353 -19 15 21.169452656 5.96 5.011 3.91 3.13 2.61 K1.5III-IVFe1 260 1
3 HD 82943 PM* 09 34 50.7353072232 -12 07 46.369202196   7.17 6.53     F9VFe+0.5 470 2
4 HD 106315 * 12 13 53.3962381416 -00 23 36.553445304   9.402 8.951     F5V 44 0
5 Kepler-117 Er* 19 15 10.3301577216 +48 02 24.785162160   15.056 14.476 14.266 13.69 F2 76 1
6 Kepler-419 EB* 19 41 40.2991189536 +51 11 05.168339880   13.498 13.036 13.088   ~ 80 1
7 Kepler-89 Ro* 19 49 19.9343204784 +41 53 28.006017936           ~ 148 1
8 Kepler-87 Ro* 19 51 40.0490199888 +46 57 54.425250252           F9 64 2
9 Kepler-79 Er* 20 02 04.1057010912 +44 22 53.646047436   14.55 13.98 14.00   F5 119 1
10 HD 192310 PM* 20 15 17.3913760474 -27 01 58.711625384   6.63 5.723 5.98 8.74 K2+V 318 1
11 HD 202696 PM* 21 16 53.9536359888 +27 15 29.242703412   9.23 8.22     K0III-IV 24 0
12 TRAPPIST-1 LM* 23 06 29.3684948589 -05 02 29.037301866     18.798 16.466 14.024 M7.5e 995 0

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