The chaotic history of the retrograde multi-planet system in K2-290A driven by distant stars
Marcela Best, Cristobal Petrovich

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the retrograde orbit of planets in the K2-290A system can naturally result from chaotic stellar obliquity evolution driven by a distant companion star, without requiring initial disk misalignment.
Contribution
It reveals a new mechanism where distant stellar companions induce chaotic spin-orbit dynamics, explaining retrograde multi-planet systems without primordial tilts.
Findings
Chaotic stellar obliquity evolution occurs in 40-70% of similar systems.
Distant companions can significantly influence close-in planetary orbits.
The mechanism applies across a wide range of orbital distances and system configurations.
Abstract
The equator of star K2-290A was recently found to be inclined by 124+/-6 degrees relative to the orbits of both its known transiting planets. The presence of a companion star B at ~100 au suggested that the birth protoplanetary disk could have tilted, thus providing an explanation for the peculiar retrograde state of this multi-planet system. In this work, we show that a primordial misalignment is not required and that the observed retrograde state is a natural consequence of the chaotic stellar obliquity evolution driven by a wider-orbit companion C at ~2000 au long after the disk disperses. The star C drives eccentricity and/or inclination oscillations on the inner binary orbit, leading to widespread chaos from the periodic resonance passages between the stellar spin and planetary secular modes. Based on a population synthesis study, we find that the observed stellar obliquity is…
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