Tidal evolution of close-in giant planets : Evidence of Type II migration?
W. K. M. Rice, J. Veljanoski, A. Collier Cameron

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether the observed properties of close-in giant planets, or 'hot Jupiters', can be explained by a formation scenario involving Type II migration followed by tidal evolution, supporting this as a plausible dominant mechanism.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that initial distributions consistent with Type II migration, combined with tidal evolution, can reproduce the observed characteristics of hot Jupiters, highlighting the significance of this migration process.
Findings
Initial pile-up at ~0.05 au is necessary.
Final eccentricity distribution peaks at e ~ 0.
Results align with observed hot Jupiter properties.
Abstract
It is well accepted that 'hot Jupiters' did not form in situ, as the temperature in the protoplanetary disc at the radius at which they now orbit would have been too high for planet formation to have occurred. These planets, instead, form at larger radii and then move into the region in which they now orbit. The exact process that leads to the formation of these close-in planets is, however, unclear and it seems that there may be more than one mechanism that can produce these short-period systems. Dynamical interactions in multiple-planet systems can scatter planets into highly eccentric orbits which, if the pericentre is sufficiently close to the parent star, can be tidally circularised by tidal interactions between the planet and star. Furthermore, systems with distant planetary or stellar companions can undergo Kozai cycles which can result in a planet orbiting very close to its…
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