Migration traps as the root cause of the Kepler dichotomy
Brianna Zawadzki, Daniel Carrera, Eric B. Ford

TL;DR
The paper suggests that the Kepler dichotomy arises from migration traps during planet formation, which create distinct planetary clusters and influence the observed multiplicity, rather than solely from mutual inclination differences.
Contribution
It introduces a new explanation for the Kepler dichotomy based on migration traps, contrasting with the previous inclination-based hypothesis.
Findings
High-mass systems often form two clusters due to migration traps.
Low-mass systems tend to form a single, unstable cluster with high mutual inclinations.
Migration traps can explain the observed distribution of transiting planetary systems.
Abstract
It is often assumed that the "Kepler dichotomy" -- the apparent excess of planetary systems with a single detected transiting planet in the Kepler catalog -- reflects an intrinsic bimodality in the mutual inclinations of planetary orbits. After conducting 600 simulations of planet formation followed by simulated Kepler observations, we instead propose that the apparent dichotomy reflects a divergence in the amount of migration and the separation of planetary semimajor axes into distinct "clusters". We find that our simulated high-mass systems migrate rapidly, bringing more planets into orbital periods of less than 200 days. The outer planets are often caught in a migration trap -- a range of planet masses and locations in which a dominant co-rotation torque prevents inward migration -- which splits the system into two clusters. If clusters are sufficiently separated, the inner cluster…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science
