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From Stability to Instability: Characterizing the Eccentricities of Multi-planet Systems in the California Kepler Survey as a Means of Studying Stability

Authors :
Doty, Matthew J.
Weiss, Lauren M.
He, Matthias Y.
Petit, Antoine C.
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Understanding the stability of exoplanet systems is crucial for constraining planetary formation and evolution theories. We use the machine-learning stability indicator, SPOCK, to characterize the stability of 126 high-multiplicity systems from the California Kepler Survey (CKS). We constrain the range of stable eccentricities for each system, adopting the value associated with a 50% chance of stability as the characteristic eccentricity. We confirm characteristic eccentricities via a small suite of N-body integrations. In studying correlations between characteristic eccentricity and various planet-pair and system-level metrics we find that minimum period ratio correlates most strongly with characteristic eccentricity. These characteristic eccentricities are approximately 20% of the eccentricities necessary for two-body mean-motion resonance overlap, suggesting three-body dynamics are needed to drive future instabilities. Systems in which the eccentricities would need to be high (> 0.15) to drive instability are likely dynamically relaxed and might be the fossils of a previous epoch of giant impacts that increased the typical planet-planet spacing.<br />Comment: 39 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, Submitted to AJ October 20 2024

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2501.06358
Document Type :
Working Paper