Secular chaos in white-dwarf planetary systems: origins of metal pollution and short-period planetary companions
Christopher E. O'Connor, Jean Teyssandier, Dong Lai

TL;DR
This paper investigates how secular chaos in multi-planet systems can cause extreme eccentricities leading to white dwarf pollution and the formation of short-period planets, highlighting its significance in planetary evolution.
Contribution
The study provides a numerical analysis of secular chaos effects in white dwarf systems, linking planetary properties to chaotic diffusion timescales and their role in metal pollution.
Findings
Secular chaos can sustain metal accretion onto white dwarfs over Gyr timescales.
Large, distant planets can drive chaotic evolution of planetesimals, leading to pollution.
Secular chaos may be the dominant mechanism for white dwarf atmospheric pollution.
Abstract
Secular oscillations in multi-planet systems can drive chaotic evolution of a small inner body through non-linear resonant perturbations. This "secular chaos" readily pushes the inner body to an extreme eccentricity, triggering tidal interactions or collision with the central star. We present a numerical study of secular chaos in systems with two planets and test particles using the ring-averaging method, with emphasis on the relationship between the planets' properties and the time-scale and efficiency of chaotic diffusion. We find that secular chaos can excite extreme eccentricities on time-scales spanning several orders of magnitude in a given system. We apply our results to the evolution of planetary systems around white dwarfs (WDs), specifically the tidal disruption and high-eccentricity migration of planetesimals and planets. We find that secular chaos in a planetesimal belt…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
