Suppression of Resonant Overstability at Sharp Migration Gradients
Konstantin Batygin, Ian R. Brunton, Alessandro Morbidelli

TL;DR
This paper investigates how sharp migration gradients in protoplanetary disks can suppress resonant overstability, affecting planet resonance formation.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical framework showing that steep torque reversals can quench overstability, supported by N-body simulations.
Findings
Overstability is suppressed when the gradient parameter β exceeds τa/τe.
Analytical predictions match N-body simulation results.
The outcome depends on the detailed structure of planet-disk interactions.
Abstract
Mean-motion resonances are expected to frequently arise at the inner edges of protoplanetary disks, where planet-disk interactions facilitate large-scale orbital convergence. Under certain conditions, however, the same dissipative forces that promote resonant capture can drive resonant librations overstable, ultimately breaking commensurabilities. Here we examine the onset of overstability near disk torque reversals and show that it can be subdued when the transition is sufficiently sharp. Adopting the dissipative circular restricted three-body problem as a paradigm, we present a WKB-style analysis that reduces the resonant dynamics to a damped, driven harmonic oscillator. Within this framework, we obtain an effective frictional term that is proportional to the local migration-rate gradient, parameterized by a dimensionless coefficient that encodes the steepness of the local…
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