Stability of exomoons around the Kepler transiting circumbinary planets
Adrian S. Hamers, Maxwell X. Cai, Javier Roa, Nathan Leigh

TL;DR
This study investigates the long-term dynamical stability of potential exomoons around Kepler's circumbinary planets using numerical simulations, identifying stable regions and the effects of inclination and binary interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stability maps for exomoons around Kepler CBPs, highlighting the influence of binary dynamics and inclination on exomoon stability.
Findings
Most stable regions are near the 1:1 mean motion resonance.
High inclinations lead to Lidov-Kozai oscillations affecting stability.
Coplanar exomoons are more likely to be stable.
Abstract
The Kepler mission has detected a number of transiting circumbinary planets (CBPs). Although currently not detected, exomoons could be orbiting some of these CBPs, and they might be suitable for harboring life. A necessary condition for the existence of such exomoons is their long-term dynamical stability. Here, we investigate the stability of exomoons around the Kepler CBPs using numerical -body integrations. We determine regions of stability and obtain stability maps in the (a_m,i_pm) plane, where a_m is the initial exolunar semimajor axis with respect to the CBP, and i_pm is the initial inclination of the orbit of the exomoon around the planet with respect to the orbit of the planet around the stellar binary. Ignoring any dependence on i_pm, for most Kepler CBPs the stability regions are well described by the location of the 1:1 mean motion commensurability of the binary orbit…
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