Near Mean-motion Resonances in the Systems Observed by Kepler: Affected by Mass Accretion and Type I Migration [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1710.02638


The Kepler mission has released over 4496 planetary candidates, among which 3483 planets have been confirmed as of April 2017. The statistical results of the planets show that there are two peaks around 1.5 and 2.0 in the distribution of orbital period ratios. The observations indicate that a plenty of planet pairs could have firstly been captured into mean motion resonances (MMRs) in planetary formation. Subsequently, these planets depart from exact resonant locations to be near MMRs configurations. Through type I migration, two low-mass planets have a tendency to be trapped into first-order MMRs (2:1 or 3:2 MMRs), however two scenarios of mass accretion of planets and potential outward migration play an important role in reshaping their final orbital configurations. Under the scenario of mass accretion, the planet pairs can cross 2:1 MMRs and then enter into 3:2 MMRs, especially for the inner pairs. With such formation scenario, the possibility that two planets are locked into 3:2 MMRs can increase if they are formed in a flat disk. Moreover, the outward migration can make planets have a high likelihood to be trapped into 3:2 MMRs. We perform additional runs to investigate the mass relationship for those planets in three-planet systems, and we show that two peaks near 1.5 and 2.0 for the period ratios of two planets can be easily reproduced through our formation scenario. We further show that the systems in chain resonances (e.g., 4:2:1, 3:2:1, 6:3:2 and 9:6:4 MMRs), have been observed in our simulations. This mechanism can be applicable to understand the formation of systems of Kepler-48, Kepler-53, Kepler-100, Kepler-192, Kepler-297, Kepler-399, and Kepler-450.

Read this paper on arXiv…

S. Wang and J. Ji
Tue, 10 Oct 17
15/70

Comments: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in AJ