Migration of Planets Into and Out of Mean Motion Resonances in Protoplanetary Disks: Analytical Theory of Second-Order Resonances
Wenrui Xu, Dong Lai

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical theory for the capture and stability of second-order mean motion resonances during planetary migration in protoplanetary disks, highlighting conditions for resonance trapping and escape.
Contribution
It provides a new analytical framework for understanding the capture and overstability of second-order MMRs, including stability criteria based on planet mass ratios and damping times.
Findings
Resonance capture requires slow convergent migration and specific eccentricity damping conditions.
Captured resonances can be overstable, leading to potential escape of planets.
Stable capture into second-order MMRs favors planets with comparable masses.
Abstract
Recent observations of Kepler multi-planet systems have revealed a number of systems with planets very close to second-order mean motion resonances (MMRs, with period ratio , , etc.) We present an analytic study of resonance capture and its stability for planets migrating in gaseous disks. Resonance capture requires slow convergent migration of the planets, with sufficiently large eccentricity damping timescale and small pre-resonance eccentricities. We quantify these requirements and find that they can be satisfied for super-Earths under protoplanetary disk conditions. For planets captured into resonance, an equilibrium state can be reached, in which eccentricity excitation due to resonant planet-planet interaction balances eccentricity damping due to planet-disk interaction. We show that this "captured" equilibrium can be overstable, leading to partial or permanent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
