Proximity of exoplanets to first-order mean-motion resonances
Carolina Charalambous, Jean Teyssandier, Anne-Sophie Libert

TL;DR
This paper investigates how planet-disc interactions during migration influence the slight offsets of planetary pairs from exact mean-motion resonances, aligning models with observed exoplanet distributions.
Contribution
It extends previous studies by analyzing the effect of various disc and planet parameters on resonance offsets for different planet masses and migration types.
Findings
Resonance offset varies with migration time and planetary mass.
Higher masses and eccentricity damping increase the offset.
Modeling with eccentricity-dependent damping reproduces observed offsets.
Abstract
Planetary formation theories and, more specifically, migration models predict that planets can be captured in mean-motion resonances (MMRs) during the disc phase. The distribution of period ratios between adjacent planets shows an accumulation in the vicinity of the resonance, which is not centred on the nominal resonance but instead presents an offset slightly exterior to it. Here we extend on previous works by thoroughly exploring the effect of different disc and planet parameters on the resonance offset during the disc migration phase. The dynamical study is carried out for several first-order MMRs and for both low-mass Earth-like planets undergoing type-I migration and giant planets evolving under type-II migration. We find that the offset varies with time during the migration of the two-planet system along the apsidal corotation resonance family. The departure from the nominal…
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