On the growth and stability of Trojan planets
Paul Cresswell, Richard P. Nelson

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic and N-body simulations to demonstrate that low-mass Trojan planets can form and remain stable throughout gas disc dispersal, suggesting they could be common in nature.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of Trojan planet stability during and after protoplanetary disc dispersal, including various migration phases.
Findings
Trojan pairs remain stable before, during, and after disc dispersal.
Eccentricities stay low (<0.02) throughout evolution.
Trojan systems can be stable for up to 10^9 years.
Abstract
We investigate the stability of those low-mass Trojan planets that form in a protoplanetary disc and subsequently accrete gas to become gas giants. We calculate their evolution before, during, and after gas disc dispersal. A two-dimensional hydrodynamics code combined with an N-body solver is used to evolve the system of disc and planets. Gas disc dispersal is simulated in a simple manner by assuming global exponential decay of the disc mass, leading to the stalling of migration after semi-major axes have approximately halved from their initial values. We consider Trojan pairs with different initial masses and gas accretion rates and gas disc models with different masses and viscosities. An N-body code, adapted to model disc forces, is used to examine large-scale migration and the formation of very short period Trojan planets. For each combination of planetary pair and disc model that…
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