Planetesimal-Driven Instabilities in Resonant Chains of Cold Neptunes and Their Dynamical Outcomes
Ryan LoRusso, Cristobal Petrovich, Hareesh Gautham Bhaskar
TLDR
Planetesimal disks disrupt resonant chains of cold Neptunes, leading to global instabilities, orbital rearrangement, and the formation of hot Neptunes.
Key contributions
- Planetesimal disks efficiently disrupt resonant chains of cold Neptunes, triggering global instabilities.
- These instabilities cause large-scale orbital rearrangement and planet loss through collisions and ejections.
- Scattered planets can migrate inward, providing a natural pathway for hot Neptune formation via tidal capture.
- This mechanism explains the observed decline in resonant fractions in planetary systems over time.
Why it matters
This paper reveals how planetesimal disks drive delayed instabilities in cold Neptune systems, explaining observed phenomena like hot Neptune formation and the decline in resonant fractions. It provides a crucial mechanism for understanding the long-term evolution and architecture of common planetary systems.
Original Abstract
Cold Neptunes and sub-Neptunes are among the most common products of planet formation and likely dominate the angular-momentum budgets in most planetary systems, yet their dynamical impact on planetary architectures remains poorly understood. Using N-body simulations, we investigate the evolution of multi-Neptune systems assembled into resonant chains during the gas-disk phase and later coupled to remnant planetesimal disks. We show that planetesimal disks containing $\simeq 1$-$4\%$ of the planetary mass efficiently disrupt resonant chains and trigger global dynamical instabilities on timescales of $1~\mathrm{Myr}$-$1~\mathrm{Gyr}$, providing a pathway for delayed instability long after gas-disk dispersal, albeit with instability timescales that are highly sensitive to disk mass. The ensuing instability drives large-scale orbital rearrangement and loss of planets through collisions, tidal disruption, and ejections. Notably, in most systems at least one planet is scattered inward to $\sim 0.1~\mathrm{au}$ on $\sim 10$-$100$ Myr timescales (for $\sim 5$-$50\; M_\oplus$ planets) following instability onset, with a substantial fraction undergoing tidal capture or disruption. This tidal capture can provide a natural pathway to hot Neptune formation, while compact inner chains, if present, would be destroyed on $\sim 100~\mathrm{Myr}$ timescales by cold sub-Neptunes, naturally explaining the observed decline in the resonant fraction. We argue that the predictions of our model, which yields mass-segregated planets and corresponding relative abundances of cold, wide-orbit, and free-floating planets, can be tested by ongoing and upcoming microlensing surveys.
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