Interaction of free-floating planets with a star-planet pair
Harry Varvoglis, Vasiliki Sgardeli, Kleomenis Tsiganis

TL;DR
This study investigates how free-floating planets interact with existing star-planet systems, revealing a fractal scattering process with significant probabilities for planet exchange or capture, which could explain unusual exoplanetary orbits.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed dynamical analysis of free-floating planet interactions with planetary systems, highlighting the fractal nature and quantifying outcome probabilities based on incoming planet mass.
Findings
Interaction is a fractal classical scattering process.
Probability of exchange or capture is significant.
Outcomes depend on the incoming planet's mass.
Abstract
The recent discovery of free-floating planets and their theoretical interpretation as celestial bodies, either condensed independently or ejected from parent stars in tight clusters, introduced an intriguing possibility. Namely, that some exoplanets are not condensed from the protoplanetary disk of their parent star. In this novel scenario a free-floating planet interacts with an already existing planetary system, created in a tight cluster, and is captured as a new planet. In the present work we study this interaction process by integrating trajectories of planet-sized bodies, which encounter a binary system consisting of a Jupiter-sized planet revolving around a Sun-like star. To simplify the problem we assume coplanar orbits for the bound and the free-floating planet and an initially parabolic orbit for the free-floating planet. By calculating the uncertainty exponent, a quantity…
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