Highly inclined and eccentric massive planets I: Planet-disc interactions
Bertram Bitsch, Aur\'elien Crida, Anne-Sophie Libert, Elena Lega

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to explore how high-mass, inclined, and eccentric planets interact with protoplanetary discs, revealing damping effects, Kozai-cycles, and complex orbital evolutions.
Contribution
It provides new damping formulae for inclination and eccentricity based on numerical simulations, enhancing understanding of planet-disc interactions for massive planets.
Findings
Inclination damping occurs on ~10^-4 deg/yr timescale.
Massive planets can undergo Kozai-cycles with the disc.
Eccentricity generally damped, except for some massive planets.
Abstract
In the Solar System, planets have a small inclination with respect to the equatorial plane of the Sun, but there is evidence that in extrasolar systems the inclination can be very high. This spin-orbit misalignment is unexpected, as planets form in a protoplanetary disc supposedly aligned with the stellar spin. Planet-planet interactions are supposed to lead to a mutual inclination, but the effects of the protoplanetary disc are still unknown. We investigate therefore planet-disc interactions for planets above 1M_Jup. We check the influence of the inclination i, eccentricity e, and mass M_p of the planet. We perform 3D numerical simulations of protoplanetary discs with embedded high-mass planets. We provide damping formulae for i and e as a function of i, e, and M_p that fit the numerical data. For highly inclined massive planets, the gap opening is reduced, and the damping of i occurs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
