International audienceContext. As a result of Titan’s migration and Saturn’s probable capture in secular spin–orbit resonance, recent works show that Saturn’s obliquity could be steadily increasing today and may reach large values in the next billions of years. Satellites around high-obliquity planets are known to be unstable in the vicinity of their Laplace radius, but the approximations used so far for Saturn’s spin axis are invalidated in this regime.Aims. We aim to investigate the behaviour of a planet and its satellite when the satellite crosses its Laplace radius while the planet is locked in secular spin–orbit resonance.Methods. We expand on previous works and revisit the concept of Laplace surface. We use it to build an averaged ana...
Tidal dissipation inside giant planets is important for the orbital evolution of their natural satel...
When a strong tidal interaction between Saturn and its icy satellites was revealed a few years ago, ...
The dynamical evolution of terrestrial planets resembling Mercury in the vicinity of spin-orbit reso...
International audienceContext. As a result of Titan’s migration and Saturn’s probable capture in sec...
International audienceThe obliquity of a planet is the tilt between its equator and its orbital plan...
International audienceContext. Giant planets are expected to form with near-zero obliquities. It has...
We study the effects of planetary late migration on the gas giants ’ obliquities. We consider the pl...
International audienceContext. The 98° obliquity of Uranus is commonly attributed to giant impacts t...
8 pages, 8 figuresInternational audienceContext. Natural satellite systems present a large variety o...
The origin of Saturn’s ~26.7° obliquity and ~100-million-year-old rings is unknown. The observed rap...
Context. Saturn’s mid-sized moons (satellites) have a puzzling orbital configuration with trapping i...
none11siSaturn is orbited by dozens of moons, and the intricate dynamics of this complex system prov...
We argue that the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn were both formed with their rotation axes nearly per...
Context. The stability of satellites in the solar system is affected by the so-called evection reson...
Tidal dissipation inside giant planets is important for the orbital evolution of their natural satel...
When a strong tidal interaction between Saturn and its icy satellites was revealed a few years ago, ...
The dynamical evolution of terrestrial planets resembling Mercury in the vicinity of spin-orbit reso...
International audienceContext. As a result of Titan’s migration and Saturn’s probable capture in sec...
International audienceThe obliquity of a planet is the tilt between its equator and its orbital plan...
International audienceContext. Giant planets are expected to form with near-zero obliquities. It has...
We study the effects of planetary late migration on the gas giants ’ obliquities. We consider the pl...
International audienceContext. The 98° obliquity of Uranus is commonly attributed to giant impacts t...
8 pages, 8 figuresInternational audienceContext. Natural satellite systems present a large variety o...
The origin of Saturn’s ~26.7° obliquity and ~100-million-year-old rings is unknown. The observed rap...
Context. Saturn’s mid-sized moons (satellites) have a puzzling orbital configuration with trapping i...
none11siSaturn is orbited by dozens of moons, and the intricate dynamics of this complex system prov...
We argue that the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn were both formed with their rotation axes nearly per...
Context. The stability of satellites in the solar system is affected by the so-called evection reson...
Tidal dissipation inside giant planets is important for the orbital evolution of their natural satel...
When a strong tidal interaction between Saturn and its icy satellites was revealed a few years ago, ...
The dynamical evolution of terrestrial planets resembling Mercury in the vicinity of spin-orbit reso...