Formation of stable exoplanetary systems around pulsars by capture: An exercise in computational classical mechanics
V\'aclav Pavl\'ik, Steven N. Shore, Vladim\'ir Karas, Maty\'a\v{s} Fuksa

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamical formation of stable exoplanetary systems around pulsars through capture, using high-precision N-body simulations to explore long-term stability and chaotic evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that chaotic post-capture evolution can lead to stable, low-eccentricity planetary systems, challenging previous assumptions about high eccentricities in such captures.
Findings
Captured planets often exhibit high eccentricities initially.
Chaotic encounters can stabilize planets at low eccentricities.
Simulation shows long-term stability is possible after chaotic evolution.
Abstract
The study of our Solar System -- its formation, evolution, and long-term stability -- has been ongoing for centuries and is now a standard part of scientific education. While the formation of other Solar-like exoplanetary systems is generally explained using the same mechanisms that describe our own, the discovery of exoplanets around pulsars in 1990s has raised new questions about their origin. Several scenarios were proposed, including formation by capture during a close encounter of a compact stellar-mass remnant and a pre-existing planetary system. It was, however, also conjectured that captured planets should exhibit high eccentricities and -- if more planets are captured -- their evolution would lead to chaos We revisit classical mechanics as applied to planetary systems. As an example and follow-up to previous works, we use an open-source high-precision -body code to…
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