On the origin of the eccentricity dichotomy displayed by compact super-Earths: dynamical heating by cold giants
Sanson T. S. Poon, Richard P. Nelson

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to explore how outer giant planets can dynamically heat inner super-Earth systems, explaining the observed eccentricity and multiplicity dichotomy in Kepler data.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the eccentricity dichotomy in Kepler systems can be explained by the dynamical influence of outer giant planets on inner super-Earth systems.
Findings
Inverse relation between eccentricities and multiplicities.
Synthetic observations match Kepler's eccentricity and multiplicity distributions.
Outer giant planets can induce the observed orbital properties of super-Earth systems.
Abstract
Approximately half of the planets discovered by NASA's Kepler mission are in systems where just a single planet transits its host star, and the remaining planets are observed to be in multi-planet systems. Recent analyses have reported a dichotomy in the eccentricity distribution displayed by systems where a single planet transits compared with that displayed by the multi-planet systems. Using -body simulations, we examine the hypothesis that this dichotomy has arisen because inner systems of super-Earths are frequently accompanied by outer systems of giant planets that can become dynamically unstable and perturb the inner systems. Our initial conditions are constructed using a subset of the known Kepler five-planet systems as templates for the inner systems, and systems of outer giant planets with masses between those of Neptune and Saturn that are centred on orbital radii $2 \le…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
