Disentangling 2:1 resonant radial velocity orbits from eccentric ones and a case study for HD 27894
Martin K\"urster, Trifon Trifonov, Sabine Reffert, Nadiia M., Kostogryz, Florian Rodler

TL;DR
This study investigates how 2:1 resonant planetary pairs can be mistaken for single eccentric planets in radial velocity data, quantifies the likelihood of such misinterpretations, and applies the analysis to the HD 27894 system.
Contribution
It provides a method to distinguish between single eccentric planets and resonant pairs, and assesses the prevalence of such systems in existing data.
Findings
74% of single-planet systems could be resonant pairs.
Model misidentification error is often smaller than data scatter.
HD 27894 system is stable with a near-2:1 resonant pair.
Abstract
In radial velocity observations, a pair of extrasolar planets near a 2:1 orbital resonance can be misinterpreted as a single eccentric planet, if data are sparse and measurement precision insufficient to distinguish between these models. We determine the fraction of alleged single-planet RV detected systems for which a 2:1 resonant pair of planets is also a viable model and address the question of how the models can be disentangled. By simulation we quantified the mismatch arising from applying the wrong model. Model alternatives are illustrated using the supposed single-planet system HD 27894 for which we also study the dynamical stability of near-2:1 resonant solutions. From the data scatter around the fitted single-planet Keplerians, we find that for of the putative single-planet systems, a 2:1 resonant pair cannot be excluded as a viable model, since the error due to…
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