Higher-order effects in the dynamics of hierarchical triple systems. Quadrupole-squared terms
Clifford M. Will

TL;DR
This paper investigates second-order quadrupolar effects in hierarchical triple systems, revealing that these effects can significantly alter orbital dynamics, especially in systems with massive third bodies, by suppressing orbital flips predicted by first-order models.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of second-order quadrupole effects in hierarchical triples, showing how averaging enhances these effects and impacts orbital evolution.
Findings
Second-order quadrupole effects are amplified by the ratio of orbital periods.
In systems with massive third bodies, these effects can suppress orbital flips.
Results agree with previous corrected double-averaging methods.
Abstract
We analyze the secular evolution of hierarchical triple systems to second-order in the quadrupolar perturbation induced on the inner binary by the distant third body. The Newtonian three-body equations of motion, expanded in powers of the ratio of semimajor axes , become a pair of effective one-body Keplerian equations of motion, perturbed by a sequence of multipolar perturbations, denoted quadrupole, , octupole, , and so on. In the Lagrange planetary equations for the evolution of the instantaneous orbital elements, second-order effects arise from obtaining the first-order solution for each element, consisting of a constant (or slowly varying) piece and an oscillatory perturbative piece, and reinserting it back into the equations to obtain a second-order solution. After an average over the two orbital timescales to obtain long-term evolutions, these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
