This paper studies the long term evolution of planetary systems containing short-period planets, including the effects of tidal circularization, secular excitation of eccentricity by companion planets, and stellar damping. For planetary systems subject to all of these effects, analytic solutions (or approximations) are presented for the time evolution of the semi-major axes and eccentricities. Secular interactions enhance the inward migration and accretion of hot Jupiters, while general relativity tends to act in opposition by reducing the effectiveness of the secular perturbations. The analytic solutions presented herein allow us to understand these effects over a wide range of parameter space and to isolate the effects of general relativi...
Since the first discovery of an extrasolar planet around a solar-type star, observers have detected ...
International audienceContext. Over the last two decades, a large population of close-in planets has...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, 2014.Cataloged from PD...
This paper studies the effects of dynamical interactions among the planets in observed extrasolar pl...
Recent observations have shown that at least some close-in exoplanets maintain eccentric orbits desp...
In stable solar systems, planets remain in nearly elliptical orbits around their stars. Over longe...
The motion of two planets around a Sun-like star under the combined effects of mutual interaction an...
Although warm jupiters are generally too far from their stars for tides to be important, the presenc...
We investigate the motion of a two-planet coplanar system under the combined effects of mutual inter...
International audienceThis chapter concerns the long-term dynamical evolution of planetary systems f...
In a multi-planet system, gravitational interactions cause orbital eccentricity variations. For non-...
Context. Tidal interactions and planetary evaporation processes impact the evolution of close-in sta...
We analyze the long-term tidal evolution of a single-planet system through the use of numerical simu...
Most planetary systems—including our own—are born within stellar clusters, where interactions with n...
Tidal interactions between short-period planets and their host stars circularize eccentric orbits, r...
Since the first discovery of an extrasolar planet around a solar-type star, observers have detected ...
International audienceContext. Over the last two decades, a large population of close-in planets has...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, 2014.Cataloged from PD...
This paper studies the effects of dynamical interactions among the planets in observed extrasolar pl...
Recent observations have shown that at least some close-in exoplanets maintain eccentric orbits desp...
In stable solar systems, planets remain in nearly elliptical orbits around their stars. Over longe...
The motion of two planets around a Sun-like star under the combined effects of mutual interaction an...
Although warm jupiters are generally too far from their stars for tides to be important, the presenc...
We investigate the motion of a two-planet coplanar system under the combined effects of mutual inter...
International audienceThis chapter concerns the long-term dynamical evolution of planetary systems f...
In a multi-planet system, gravitational interactions cause orbital eccentricity variations. For non-...
Context. Tidal interactions and planetary evaporation processes impact the evolution of close-in sta...
We analyze the long-term tidal evolution of a single-planet system through the use of numerical simu...
Most planetary systems—including our own—are born within stellar clusters, where interactions with n...
Tidal interactions between short-period planets and their host stars circularize eccentric orbits, r...
Since the first discovery of an extrasolar planet around a solar-type star, observers have detected ...
International audienceContext. Over the last two decades, a large population of close-in planets has...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, 2014.Cataloged from PD...