The PAIRS project: a global formation model for planets in binaries. II. Gravitational perturbation effects from secondary stars
Arianna Nigioni, Julia Venturini, Emeline Bolmont, Diego Turrini, Yann Alibert, Alexandre Emsenhuber

TL;DR
This study extends a planet formation model to include gravitational effects of secondary stars in binary systems, revealing their significant impact on planet growth, stability, and system architecture.
Contribution
It introduces modifications to the Bern model to simulate gravitational perturbations from secondary stars, enabling more accurate modeling of planet formation in binaries.
Findings
Planets beyond half the Hill radius are more likely to become unbound.
Binary perturbations suppress planetary growth even in stable zones.
Both disk truncation and stellar perturbations are essential for accurate modeling.
Abstract
Roughly half of Sun-like stars have at least one stellar companion, whereas it is widely assumed that most known exoplanets orbit single stars, largely due to observational biases. However, astrometric surveys, direct imaging, and speckle interferometry are steadily increasing the number of confirmed exoplanets in binaries. A stellar companion introduces additional effects, such as circumstellar disk truncation and gravitational perturbations, which can strongly impact planet formation. While global planet formation models, for example the Bern model, have been broadly applied to single stars, modeling S-type binaries requires key modifications to capture these effects. This study extends the Bern model by incorporating the gravitational influence of a stellar companion into its N-body integrator, allowing us to quantify how this perturbation affects planetary formation and final system…
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