Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems in Presence of Highly Inclined Stellar Perturbers
Konstantin Batygin, Alessandro Morbidelli, and Kleomenis Tsiganis

TL;DR
This paper investigates how gravitational interactions within protoplanetary disks and planet-planet interactions can suppress the Kozai effect, enabling planet formation in highly inclined binary star systems despite secular perturbations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that disk self-gravity and planet-planet interactions can inhibit Kozai cycles, facilitating planet formation in inclined binary systems, and explores the dynamical evolution leading to Kozai-dominated states.
Findings
Disk self-gravity induces rapid apsidal recession, erasing Kozai cycles.
Planet-planet interactions cause apsidal precession, suppressing Kozai effects post-formation.
Planet formation in inclined binaries is similar to that around single stars.
Abstract
The presence of highly eccentric extrasolar planets in binary stellar systems suggests that the Kozai effect has played an important role in shaping their dynamical architectures. However, the formation of planets in inclined binary systems poses a considerable theoretical challenge, as orbital excitation due to the Kozai resonance implies destructive, high-velocity collisions among planetesimals. To resolve the apparent difficulties posed by Kozai resonance, we seek to identify the primary physical processes responsible for inhibiting the action of Kozai cycles in protoplanetary disks. Subsequently, we seek to understand how newly-formed planetary systems transition to their observed, Kozai-dominated dynamical states. We find that theoretical difficulties in planet formation arising from the presence of a distant companion star, posed by the Kozai effect and other secular…
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