Making hot Jupiters in stellar clusters II: efficient formation in binary systems
Daohai Li, Alexander J. Mustill, Melvyn B. Davies, and Yan-Xiang Gong

TL;DR
This study investigates how the cluster environment enhances hot Jupiter formation via the XZKL mechanism, highlighting the role of stellar scattering and binary interactions in open clusters like M67.
Contribution
The paper presents an analytical model and N-body simulations showing cluster potential and stellar scattering facilitate XZKL-driven hot Jupiter formation, especially in wide binaries.
Findings
0.8%-3% of planets around initially-single stars experience XZKL.
2%-26% of planets around initially-binary stars experience XZKL.
Overall XZKL fraction in the cluster is 3%-21%, influenced by binarity.
Abstract
Observations suggested that the occurrence rate of hot Jupiters (HJs) in open clusters is largely consistent with the field () but in the binary-rich cluster M67, the rate is . How does the cluster environment boost HJ formation via the high-eccentricity tidal migration initiated by the extreme-amplitude von Zeipel-Lidov-Kozai (XZKL) mechanism forced by a companion star? Our analytical treatment shows that the cluster's collective gravitational potential alters the companion's orbit slowly, which may render the star-planet-companion configuration XZKL-favourable, a phenomenon only possible for very wide binaries. We have also performed direct Gyr -body simulations of the star cluster evolution and XZKL of planets' orbit around member stars. We find that an initially-single star may acquire a companion star via stellar scattering and the companion may enable XZKL in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
