Dynamics of passing-stars-perturbed binary star systems
David Bancelin, Thomas Nordlander, Elke Pilat-Lohinger, Birgit, Loibnegger

TL;DR
This study models how passing stars over 200 million years influence binary star systems, revealing that wider binaries are more susceptible to disruption and orbital changes, impacting planetary stability.
Contribution
It provides a statistical analysis of the dynamical effects of stellar fly-bys on binary systems with varying initial separations, highlighting the increased disruption with larger initial orbital distances.
Findings
Wider binaries experience greater eccentricity and periapsis variations.
Up to 50% of wide binaries can be disrupted after stellar encounters.
Planetary orbits show decreased variance with increasing initial binary separation.
Abstract
In this work, we investigate the dynamical effects of a sequence of close encounters over 200 Myr varying in the interval of 10000 -- 100000 au between a binary star system and passing stars with masses ranging from 0.1 to 10. We focus on binaries consisting of two Sun-like stars with various orbital separations from 50 au to 200 au initially on circular-planar orbits. We treat the problem statistically since each sequence is cloned 1000 times. Our study shows that orbits of binaries initially at = 50 au will slightly be perturbed by each close encounter and exhibit a small deviation in eccentricity (+0.03) and in periapsis distance (+1 and -2 au) around the mean value. However increasing will drastically increase these variances: up to +0.45 in eccentricity and between +63 au and -106…
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