A general model of resonance capture in planetary systems: First and second order resonances
Alexander J. Mustill, Mark C. Wyatt

TL;DR
This paper develops a Hamiltonian model to analyze how bodies are captured into first and second order mean motion resonances during planetary migration, with implications for understanding planetary systems and debris discs.
Contribution
It introduces a unified Hamiltonian framework for all resonances of the same order, enabling comprehensive analysis of resonance capture and behavior during planetary migration.
Findings
Capture probability decreases with higher migration rates and eccentricities.
More massive planets can capture particles at higher eccentricities and migration rates.
Libration amplitudes increase with initial eccentricity.
Abstract
Mean motion resonances are a common feature of both our own Solar System and of extrasolar planetary systems. Bodies can be trapped in resonance when their orbital semi-major axes change, for instance when they migrate through a protoplanetary disc. We use a Hamiltonian model to thoroughly investigate the capture behaviour for first and second order resonances. Using this method, all resonances of the same order can be described by one equation, with applications to specific resonances by appropriate scaling. We focus on the limit where one body is a massless test particle and the other a massive planet. We quantify how the the probability of capture into a resonance depends on the relative migration rate of the planet and particle, and the particle's eccentricity. Resonant capture fails for high migration rates, and has decreasing probability for higher eccentricities. More massive…
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