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Journal ArticleDOI

Three-dimensional Interaction between a Planet and an Isothermal Gaseous Disk. II. Eccentricity Waves and Bending Waves

TLDR
In this paper, the authors considered small planets with no disk gap around their orbits and proposed a model to investigate three-dimensional density waves excited by planets on elliptical and inclined orbits in isothermal protoplanetary disks.
Abstract
We perform linear calculations to investigate three-dimensional density waves excited by planets on elliptical and inclined orbits in isothermal protoplanetary disks. We consider small planets that have no disk gap around their orbits. Eccentricities and inclinations of planets are assumed to be smaller than the disk aspect ratio. This is reasonable for planets with no disk gap. The density wave excited by a planet with nonzero small eccentricity e and inclination i is decomposed into three components: the waves by a planet with e = i = 0, the eccentricity waves, and the bending waves. The eccentricity waves are related to the noncircular motion of the planet, while the bending waves are excited by the motion normal to the equatorial plane. In our formulation, these waves are described by the same wave equations, and only the perturbing potentials are different. We numerically solve the wave equations and calculate the force exerted on the planet by the waves. The force is not parallel to the velocity of the epicycle motion. From the force obtained, we also find the evolution rates in the eccentricity, the inclination, and the longitudes of the perihelion and the ascending node. The characteristic evolution time of these orbital elements is about 300(r/1 AU)2 yr for Earth-sized planets in the minimum-mass nebula disk. Eccentricity damping is caused by eccentricity waves, while inclination damping is due to bending waves for planets with small eccentricities and inclinations and with no disk gap. This means that to lowest order there is no coupling between the evolutions of the eccentricity and the inclination.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Planet-Disk Interaction and Orbital Evolution

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review current understanding of disk-planet interactions, focusing in particular on physical processes that determine the speed and direction of migration of the planet, and examine the influence of Lindblad and corotation torques as a function of disk properties.
Book

The Exoplanet Handbook

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An extrasolar planetary system with three Neptune-mass planets

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A common mass scaling for satellite systems of gaseous planets

TL;DR: It is shown that the overall properties of the satellite systems of Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus arise naturally, and it is suggested that similar processes could limit the largest moons of extrasolar Jupiter-mass planets to Moon-to-Mars size.
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Ten New and Updated Multiplanet Systems and a Survey of Exoplanetary Systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the latest velocities for ten multi-planet systems, including a re-analysis of archival Keck and Lick data, and derive updated orbital fits for 10 Lick and Keck systems including two systems (HD 11964, HD 183263) for which they provided confirmation of second planets only tentatively identified elsewhere, and two others (HD 187123 and HD 217107), for which the outer planet's orbit.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Disk-Satellite Interactions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors calculate the rate at which angular momentum and energy are transferred between a disk and a satellite which orbit the same central mass, and show that substantial changes in both the structure of the disk and the orbit of Jupiter must have taken place on a time scale of a few thousand years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-Dimensional Interaction between a Planet and an Isothermal Gaseous Disk. I. Corotation and Lindblad Torques and Planet Migration

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the torque on a planet and the resultant radial migration of the planet during its formation in a protoplanetary disk and derived a general torque formula for corotation resonances, which is also applicable to 2D disks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The excitation of density waves at the Lindblad and corotation resonances by an external potential.

TL;DR: In this article, the linear response of a differentially rotating two-dimensional gas disk to a rigidly rotating external potential was investigated. But the main assumptions are that the sound speed is much smaller than the orbital velocity and that the external potential varies on the scale of the disk radius.
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