Shrinking Binary and Planetary Orbits by Kozai Cycles with Tidal Friction
Princeton University · Institute for Advanced Study
Abstract
At least two arguments suggest that the orbits of a large fraction of binary stars and extrasolar planets shrank by 1-2 orders of magnitude after formation: (i) the physical radius of a star shrinks by a large factor from birth to the main sequence, yet many main-sequence stars have companions orbiting only a few stellar radii away, and (ii) in current theories of planet formation, the region within ~0.1 AU of a protostar is too hot and rarefied for a Jupiter-mass planet to form, yet many "hot Jupiters" are observed at such distances. We investigate orbital shrinkage by the combined effects of secular perturbations from a distant companion star (Kozai oscillations) and tidal friction. We integrate the relevant…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 64
Authors
2- DFDaniel FabryckyCorresponding
Princeton University
- STScott Tremaine
Princeton University, Institute for Advanced Study
Topics & keywords
- Binary star
- Stars
- Tidal acceleration
- RADIUS
- Planet
- Orbit (dynamics)
- Tidal heating
- Orbital elements