Formation of a planetary Laplace resonance through migration in an eccentric disk - The case of GJ876
Nicolas P. Cimerman, Wilhelm Kley, Rolf Kuiper

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to explore how disk-planet interactions in a protoplanetary disk can lead to the formation of a Laplace resonance in the GJ 876 system, emphasizing the role of disk eccentricity and migration dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed modeling of multi-planet migration in an eccentric disk, revealing mechanisms for resonance formation and the importance of disk parameters in shaping planetary systems.
Findings
Outer planet migration can be halted or lead to resonance depending on disk conditions.
Eccentricity in the disk influences torque and resonance capture.
Resonant chain formation is consistent with late outer planet migration.
Abstract
Orbital mean motion resonances in planetary systems originate from dissipative processes in disk-planet interactions that lead to orbital migration. In multi-planet systems that host giant planets, the perturbation of the protoplanetary disk strongly affects the migration of companion planets. By studying the well-characterized resonant planetary system around GJ 876 we aim to explore which effects shape disk-driven migration in such a multi-planet system to form resonant chains. We modelled the orbital migration of three planets embedded in a protoplanetary disk using two-dimensional locally isothermal hydrodynamical simulations. We performed a parameter study by varying the disk thickness, viscosity, mass as well as the initial position of the planets. Moreover, we have analysed and compared simulations with various boundary conditions at the disk's inner rim. We find that…
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