Orbital instability of close-in exomoons in non-coplanar systems

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Abstract

This work shows the dynamical instability that can happen to close-in satellites when planet oblateness is not accounted for in non-coplanar multiplanet systems. Simulations include two secularly interacting Jupiter-mass planets mutually inclined by 10°, with the host planet either oblate or spherical. With a spherical host planet, moons within a critical planetocentric distance experience high inclinations and in some cases high eccentricities, while more distant moons orbit stablywith lowinclinations and eccentricities, as expected. These counter-intuitive dynamical phenomena disappear with an oblate host planet, in which case the moons' Laplace plane transitions from the host planet's equatorial plane to the host planet's precessing orbital plane as their semimajor axes increase, and all moons are dynamically stable with very mild changes in orbits. Direct perturbation from the perturbing planet has been investigated and ruled out as an explanation for the behaviour of the innermost satellites, therefore leaving the central star's perturbation as the cause. Instability occurs while the nodal precession of the satellite and the central star (as seen from the host planet's frame) approaches the 1:1 secular resonance. In non-coplanar systems, around a non-oblate planet, the nodal precession of the moon becomes slowand comparable to that of the planet, giving rise to resonant configurations. The above effect needs to be taken into account in setting up numerical simulations.

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APA

Hong, Y. C., Tiscareno, M. S., Nicholson, P. D., & Lunine, J. I. (2015). Orbital instability of close-in exomoons in non-coplanar systems. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 449(1), 828–834. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv311

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