Searching for the Grand Tack in Exoplanetary Data
A.J. Cridland

TL;DR
This study searches for signs of the Grand Tack planetary migration mechanism in exoplanet data, focusing on specific orbital and mass configurations, but finds limited conclusive evidence.
Contribution
It introduces a method to identify Grand Tack-like systems in exoplanet data based on orbital resonance and mass criteria, extending the concept beyond our Solar System.
Findings
No conclusive evidence for Grand Tack systems found.
Some systems show signs of planet formation at disk gap edges.
Method can identify potential Grand Tack candidates in exoplanet data.
Abstract
The grand tack model, more generally called the Masset and Snellgrove mechanism, is a planetary migration model whereby two giant planets via interactions with their natal disk migrated to larger orbital radii. While its relevance in our own Solar System remains in question, the fact that the Masset and Snellgrove mechanism is a general hydrodynamical effect implies that it may have occurred in another planetary system. In this study I searched through exoplanet data for evidence of the Masset and Snellgrove mechanism, which requires that (1) the inner of the two planets is more massive than the outer planet; (2) the planets are sufficiently massive that their gravity-induced gap overlaps; and (3) they orbit at sufficiently close radii that their co-rotation regions also overlap. The last two requirements are met when the planets orbit with a 3:2 mean motion resonance. I do not find…
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