Ultra-short-period planets from secular chaos
Cristobal Petrovich, Emily Deibert, Yanqin Wu

TL;DR
This paper proposes that ultra-short-period planets form through high-eccentricity migration driven by secular chaos with companion planets, explaining their orbital characteristics and predicting observable features such as inclined spin-orbit angles and distant companions.
Contribution
It introduces a secular chaos-driven high-eccentricity migration model for USP planet formation, linking planetary system dynamics to observed orbital properties.
Findings
USP planets likely have distant planetary companions.
Most USP planets have spin-orbit angles of 10-50 degrees.
The model predicts observable distant companions beyond 1 AU.
Abstract
Over a hundred rocky planets orbiting Sun-like stars in very short orbital periods (<1 day) have been discovered by the Kepler mission. These planets, known as ultra-short-period (USP) planets, are unlikely to have attained their orbits in situ. Instead, they must have migrated in. Here we propose that these planets reach their current orbits by high-eccentricity migration. In a scaled-down version of the dynamics that may have been experienced by their high mass analog, the hot Jupiters, these planets reach high eccentricities via chaotic secular interactions with their companion planets and then undergo orbital circularization due to dissipation of tides raised on the planet. This proposal is motivated by the following observations: planetary systems observed by Kepler often contain several super-Earths with non-negligible eccentricities and inclinations, and possibly extending beyond…
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