Puzzling out the coexistence of terrestrial planets and giant exoplanets. The 2/1 resonant periodic orbits
Kyriaki I. Antoniadou, Anne-Sophie Libert

TL;DR
This study investigates the long-term stability of terrestrial planets coexisting with giant exoplanets, especially in 2/1 resonant orbits, using dynamical maps and periodic orbit analysis within the three-body problem framework.
Contribution
It introduces new families of symmetric and asymmetric periodic orbits for the 2/1 resonance and demonstrates the potential for stable terrestrial planets in resonant and non-resonant configurations with eccentric giant planets.
Findings
Terrestrial planets can coexist with eccentric giant planets in stable orbits.
Stable coexistence is possible both in resonant and non-resonant configurations.
New families of periodic orbits for the 2/1 resonance are identified.
Abstract
Hundreds of giant planets have been discovered so far and the quest of exo-Earths in giant planet systems has become intriguing. In this work, we aim to address the question of the possible long-term coexistence of a terrestrial companion on an orbit interior to a giant planet, and explore the extent of the stability regions for both non-resonant and resonant configurations. Our study focuses on the restricted three-body problem, where an inner terrestrial planet (massless body) moves under the gravitational attraction of a star and an outer massive planet on a circular or elliptic orbit. Using the Detrended Fast Lyapunov Indicator as a chaotic indicator, we constructed maps of dynamical stability by varying both the eccentricity of the outer giant planet and the semi-major axis of the inner terrestrial planet, and identify the boundaries of the stability domains. Guided by the…
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