Resonant Chains of Exoplanets: Libration Centers for Three-body Angles
Jared Siegel, Daniel Fabrycky

TL;DR
This paper investigates three-body angles in resonant chains of exoplanets through N-body simulations, identifying libration centers and applying findings to observed systems, enhancing understanding of planetary resonances.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of three-body angles in resonant chains, relating theoretical models to observable data from Kepler systems.
Findings
180-degree libration center is preferred under the formulation used.
Libration centers shifted from 180 degrees indicate non-adjacent resonances.
Three-body angles during observation may not reflect long-term dynamics.
Abstract
Resonant planetary systems contain at least one planet pair with orbital periods librating at a near-integer ratio (2/1, 3/2, 4/3, etc.) and are a natural outcome of standard planetary formation theories. Systems with multiple adjacent resonant pairs are known as resonant chains and can exhibit three-body resonances -- characterized by a critical three-body angle. Here we study three-body angles as a diagnostic of resonant chains through tidally-damped N-body integrations. For each combination of the 2:1, 3:2, 4:3, and 5:4 mean motion resonances (the most common resonances in the known resonant chains), we characterize the three-body angle equilibria for several mass schemes, migration timescales, and initial separations. We find that under our formulation of the three-body angle, which does not reduce coefficients, 180 deg is the preferred libration center, and libration centers…
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