Extrasolar Planet Interactions
Rory Barnes (Arizona), Richard Greenberg (Arizona)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the dynamical interactions in known extrasolar planetary systems, revealing their proximity to stability boundaries, common interaction patterns, and methods to identify resonances and instabilities.
Contribution
It introduces parameters to quantify apsidal interactions and proximity to instability, providing new tools for analyzing planetary system dynamics.
Findings
Many systems are near the boundary between stability and instability.
Planets often have eccentricities that periodically drop near zero.
Resonant pairs are stabilized by their resonance, preventing instability.
Abstract
The dynamical interactions of planetary systems may be a clue to their formation histories. Therefore, the distribution of these interactions provides important constraints on models of planet formation. We focus on each system's apsidal motion and proximity to dynamical instability. Although only ~25 multiple planet systems have been discovered to date, our analyses in these terms have revealed several important features of planetary interactions. 1) Many systems interact such that they are near the boundary between stability and instability. 2) Planets tend to form such that at least one planet's eccentricity periodically drops to near zero. 3) Mean-motion resonant pairs would be unstable if not for the resonance. 4) Scattering of approximately equal mass planets is unlikely to produce the observed distribution of apsidal behavior. 5) Resonant interactions may be identified through…
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