A framework for the architecture of exoplanetary systems. II. Nature versus nurture: Emergent formation pathways of architecture classes
Lokesh Mishra, Yann Alibert, St\'ephane Udry, Christoph Mordasini

TL;DR
This paper introduces a framework to classify exoplanetary system architectures and investigates their formation pathways, revealing how initial conditions and dynamical interactions influence system architecture and its correlation with stellar metallicity.
Contribution
It presents a model-independent architecture framework and applies it to synthetic systems, uncovering formation pathways and a new metallicity-architecture correlation.
Findings
Most systems from low-mass disks are similar.
Heavier disks lead to diverse architectures.
Dynamical interactions shift architectures from mixed to ordered.
Abstract
In the first paper of this series, we proposed a model-independent framework for characterising the architecture of planetary systems at the system level. There are four classes of planetary system architecture: similar, mixed, anti-ordered, and ordered. In this paper, we investigate the formation pathways leading to these four architecture classes. To understand the role of nature versus nurture in sculpting the final (mass) architecture of a system, we apply our architecture framework to synthetic planetary systems -- formed via core-accretion -- using the Bern model. General patterns emerge in the formation pathways of the four architecture classes. Almost all planetary systems emerging from protoplanetary disks whose initial solid mass was less than one Jupiter mass are similar. Systems emerging from heavier disks may become mixed, anti-ordered, or ordered. Increasing dynamical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
