论文标题
嵌入式群集环境中S型行星系统的动态命运
Dynamical Fates of S-Type Planetary Systems in Embedded Cluster Environments
论文作者
论文摘要
主机系外行星的大多数二进制星系将在一个形成星形的集群中度过生命的第一部分,该集群可能会驱动二进制行星系统的动态演变。我们对S型行星进行数值模拟,其质量和轨道结构类似于太阳系的4个气体巨头,在0.5太阳能质量二元伴侣的影响下绕行。二进制空间系统与嵌入式恒星群集环境同时集成。当我们的簇环境的扰动将二进制底座驱动到行星时,我们的行星系统中有10%不稳定。尽管我们的所有系统都用二元轨道初始化,但这种稳定仍会发生,这些轨道将在没有簇的情况下允许稳定的行星。在我们的系统中触发的行星散射通常会导致较低的质量行星的丧失以及越来越多的较高质量行星的偏心率的兴奋。我们的许多行星系统都不稳定,在群集散布之前也失去了二元同伴,因此可以伪装成一群古怪的系外行星的宿主,这些系外行星已经将整个历史记录为孤立的恒星。在我们的模拟中,集群驱动的二元轨道演变也可以生成具有未对准的旋转角度的行星系统。这通常是因为行星系统在倾斜的二进制的影响下作为刚性磁盘的进攻,而那些旋转角度最高的系统通常应保留其二进制伴侣并具有多个幸存的行星。
The majority of binary star systems that host exoplanets will spend the first portion of their lives within a star-forming cluster that may drive dynamical evolution of the binary-planet system. We perform numerical simulations of S-type planets, with masses and orbital architecture analogous to the solar system's 4 gas giants, orbiting within the influence of a 0.5 solar-mass binary companion. The binary-planet system is integrated simultaneously with an embedded stellar cluster environment. ~10% of our planetary systems are destabilized when perturbations from our cluster environment drive the binary periastron toward the planets. This destabilization occurs despite all of our systems being initialized with binary orbits that would allow stable planets in the absence of the cluster. The planet-planet scattering triggered in our systems typically results in the loss of lower mass planets and the excitement of the eccentricities of surviving higher mass planets. Many of our planetary systems that go unstable also lose their binary companions prior to cluster dispersal and can therefore masquerade as hosts of eccentric exoplanets that have spent their entire histories as isolated stars. The cluster-driven binary orbital evolution in our simulations can also generate planetary systems with misaligned spin-orbit angles. This is typically done as the planetary system precesses as a rigid disk under the influence of an inclined binary, and those systems with the highest spin-orbit angles should often retain their binary companion and possess multiple surviving planets.