Formation of Multiple-Satellite Systems From Low-Mass Circumplanetary Particle Disks
Ryuki Hyodo, Keiji Ohtsuki, Takaaki Takeda

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to explore how multiple satellites can form from low-mass circumplanetary particle disks, revealing complex interactions and diverse system architectures.
Contribution
It introduces detailed N-body simulation results for multiple satellite formation from low-mass disks, including resonance trapping and co-orbital satellite formation.
Findings
Satellites can shepherd disk edges and migrate outward.
Resonance locking leads to sequential satellite formation.
Diverse orbital architectures emerge due to stochastic interactions.
Abstract
Circumplanetary particle disks would be created in the late stage of planetary formation either by impacts of planetary bodies or disruption of satellites or passing bodies, and satellites can be formed by accretion of disk particles spreading across the Roche limit. Previous N-body simulation of lunar accretion focused on the formation of single-satellite systems from disks with large disk-to-planet mass ratios, while recent models of the formation of multiple-satellite systems from disks with smaller mass ratios do not take account of gravitational interaction between formed satellites. In the present work, we investigate satellite accretion from particle disks with various masses, using N-body simulation. In the case of accretion from somewhat less massive disks than the case of lunar accretion, formed satellites are not massive enough to clear out the disk, but can become massive…
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