Influence of Modeling Assumptions on the Inferred Dynamical State of Resonant Systems: A Case Study of the HD 45364 System
2025, ApJ, 980(2), 236 Planetary systems exhibiting mean-motion resonances (MMRs) offer unique opportunities to study the imprint of disk-induced migration on the orbital architectures of planetary systems. The HD 45364 system, discovered via the radial velocity (RV) method to host two giant planets...
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Main Authors | , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
28.10.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | 2025, ApJ, 980(2), 236 Planetary systems exhibiting mean-motion resonances (MMRs) offer unique
opportunities to study the imprint of disk-induced migration on the orbital
architectures of planetary systems. The HD 45364 system, discovered via the
radial velocity (RV) method to host two giant planets in a 3:2 MMR, has been
the subject of several studies attempting to reconstruct the system's orbital
migration history based on its present-day resonant configuration. Recently, Li
et al. (2022) called into question the system's residence in the 3:2 MMR based
on a revised orbital solution derived from an expanded set of RV observations
that extend the time baseline of the original discovery data by over a decade.
However, we show that inferences about the planets' dynamical state with
respect to the 3:2 MMR are sensitive to the particular prior assumptions
adopted in the orbital modeling. Using $N$-body dynamical models, we show that
orbital solutions constrained to reside deep in the 3:2 MMR fit the RV data
with a similar quality to unconstrained orbital solutions. We conclude that the
RV observations of HD 45364 are consistent with orbital configurations produced
by smooth migration and resonance capture. We further show that past convergent
orbital migration can reproduce the system's present-day orbital configuration
provided that the ratio of migration to eccentricity damping timescales, $K$,
was in the range $11\lesssim K \lesssim 144$. We also find that dynamical
interactions in the system can break the usual mass-inclination degeneracy
inherent to Keplerian models of RV observations and constrain the planets'
absolute masses to within a factor of $\sim1.5$. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.21429 |