2017AJ....153..210H


Query : 2017AJ....153..210H

2017AJ....153..210H - Astron. J., 153, 210-210 (2017/May-0)

Dynamically hot super-Earths from outer giant planet scattering.

HUANG C.X., PETROVICH C. and DEIBERT E.

Abstract (from CDS):

The hundreds of multiple planetary systems discovered by the Kepler mission are typically observed to reside in close-in ( 0.5 AU), low-eccentricity, low-inclination orbits. We run N-body experiments to study the effect that unstable outer ( 1 AU) giant planets, whose end orbital configurations resemble those in the Radial Velocity population, have on these close-in multiple super-Earth systems. Our experiments show that the giant planets greatly reduce the multiplicity of the inner super-Earths, and the surviving population can have large eccentricities (e 0.3) and inclinations (i 20) at levels that anti-correlate with multiplicity. Consequently, this model predicts the existence of a population of dynamically hot single-transiting planets with typical eccentricities and inclinations of ∼0.1-0.5 and ∼10°-40°. We show that these results can explain the following observations: (i) the recent eccentricity measurements of Kepler super-Earths from transit durations; (ii) the tentative observation that single-transiting systems have a wider distribution of stellar obliquity angles compared to the multiple-transiting systems; (iii) the architecture of some eccentric super-Earths discovered by Radial Velocity surveys such as HD 125612c. Future observations from TESS will reveal many more dynamically hot single transiting planets, for which follow up radial velocity studies will be able to test our models and see whether they have outer giant planets.

Abstract Copyright: © 2017. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability - planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability

Simbad objects: 19

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Number of rows : 19
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 11964 PM* 01 57 09.6074243168 -10 14 32.732533622   7.25 6.42     G9VCN+1 184 1
2 HD 47186 PM* 06 36 08.7879310512 -27 37 20.268367464   8.36 7.63     G6V 144 1
3 * rho01 Cnc EB* 08 52 35.8111044043 +28 19 50.954994470 7.45 6.82   5.4   K0IV-V 1121 1
4 BD-08 2823 PM* 10 00 47.7204762252 -09 31 00.044866538   10.94 9.874 9.801   K4:V 71 1
5 HD 102089 * 11 44 19.5796613736 -73 18 15.396923016   9.52 8.86     G0V 23 0
6 HD 125612 PM* 14 20 53.5176649416 -17 28 53.489705520   8.93 8.32     G3V 122 1
7 HD 125612c Pl 14 20 53.5176649416 -17 28 53.489705520           ~ 24 1
8 * mu. Ara PM* 17 44 08.7031414872 -51 50 02.591603160   5.85 5.15     G3IV-V 531 2
9 BD+48 2893 Er* 19 24 07.7659706688 +49 02 24.928348272   10.73 10.08 9.914   G1V 135 1
10 HD 181433 PM* 19 25 09.5666936172 -66 28 07.676956827   9.42 8.38     K3III-IV 124 1
11 Kepler-56c Pl 19 35 02.0011980936 +41 52 18.692360400           ~ 46 1
12 Kepler-56b Pl 19 35 02.0011980936 +41 52 18.692360400           ~ 60 1
13 Kepler-56 RG* 19 35 02.0011980936 +41 52 18.692360400   13.954 12.756 12.379   ~ 174 1
14 Kepler-89 Ro* 19 49 19.9343204784 +41 53 28.006017936           ~ 148 1
15 HD 190360 PM* 20 03 37.4050868074 +29 53 48.492435887   6.44   5.2   G7IV-V 444 1
16 HD 204961 PM* 21 33 33.9751191976 -49 00 32.399427028 11.359 10.176 8.672 7.665 6.479 M2/3V 290 1
17 HD 215497 PM* 22 46 36.7539769920 -56 35 58.326725148   9.92 8.95     K3V 59 1
18 BD-15 6290 BY* 22 53 16.7325836486 -14 15 49.304052185 12.928 11.749 10.192 9.013 7.462 M3.5V 1013 1
19 HD 219828 * 23 18 46.7341555224 +18 38 44.619358200   8.68 8.01     G0IV 111 1

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