Investigating Planet Formation and Evolutionary Processes with Short-Period Exoplanets
Brian Jackson, Elisabeth Adams, Ren\'e Heller, and Michael Endl

TL;DR
Short-period exoplanets, with their unique proximity to host stars, challenge existing planet formation theories and offer valuable insights into planetary evolution, composition, and migration processes.
Contribution
This paper reviews the distinct formation and evolutionary pathways of short-period exoplanets and highlights their importance for understanding planetary systems.
Findings
Short-period planets have diverse origins, including in-situ formation and migration.
Their proximity allows detailed observational studies of planetary properties.
These planets provide clues about planetary migration and star-planet interactions.
Abstract
From wispy gas giants on the verge of disruption to tiny rocky bodies already falling apart, short-period exoplanets pose a severe puzzle to theories of planet formation and orbital evolution. By far most of the planets known beyond the solar system orbit their stars in much tighter orbits than the most close-in planet in the solar system, Mercury. Short-period planets experienced dynamical and evolutions histories distinct from their farther-out cousins, and so it's not clear they are representative of all planets. These exoplanets typically have radii between about 1 and 4 Earth radii, whereas the solar system does not contain any planet in this radius range. And while the most massive planets in the solar system occupy the icy regions beyond about 5 AU from the sun, about 1% of sun-like stars have a Jupiter-mass planet near 0.05 AU, with just a few days of an orbital period. How did…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
