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Kozai Migration. Yanqin Wu Mike Ramsahai. The distribution of orbital periods. P(T) increases from 120 to 2000 days Incomplete for longer periods Clear excess at 3-4 days. Evidence for tidal evolution. Maximum e declines with a: tidal circularization
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Kozai Migration Yanqin Wu Mike Ramsahai
The distribution of orbital periods • P(T) increases from 120 to 2000 days • Incomplete for longer periods • Clear excess at 3-4 days
Evidence for tidal evolution • Maximum e declines with a: tidal circularization • The two highest e planets are in binary star systems • (plot stolen from former CITA postdoc Phil Armitage)
Migration: Disk-Planet Interactions • A planet embedded in a gas disk excites spiral density waves via gravitational interactions; like the wake from a boat, these waves exert a torque on the planets • In type I migration (low mass planets) the gas occupies orbits coincident with the planet • In type II migration (Jupiter mass planets) the gas is pushed away from the planet, leaving a gap. This slows the migration rate to match the viscous evolution time scale of the disk
Why Kozai Migration? • The masses of close in planets tend to be smaller than those at larger a (disk migration-see plot) • However, the pile up of planets at three days, where tidal effects are strong, is very suggestive. • Similarly, the finding that the most massive planets in 3-4 day orbits are in binary systems is suggestive, and consistent with Kozai • Finally, the fact that the highest e planets are in binary systems is evidence that Kozai is operating
Why Kozai Migration? • The pile up of planets at three days, where tidal effects are strong, is very suggestive. • The masses of close in planets tend to be smaller than those at larger a (see plot) • Similarly, the finding that the most massive planets in 3-4 day orbits are in binary systems is also suggestive • The fact that the highest e planets are in binary systems is evidence that Kozai is operating, at least in those (relatively large a) systems
Celestial Mechanics • a semi major axis; e eccentricity; I inclination • f ~ nt with n2=GM/a3; longitude of periapse; longitude of node • r = a(1-e2)/[1+e cos(f-)] • E/mp = 1/2 v2 - GM/r = GM/2a • L/mp = [Gma(1 -e2)]1/2 • r2df/dt = L/mp • rp = a(1-e)
I, mutual inclination K K1 is the line of nodes
Celestial Mechanics • a semi-major axis; e eccentricity; I inclination • f ~ nt; longitude of periapse; longitude of node • r = a(1-e2)/[1+e cos(f-)] • Ep/mp = 1/2 v2 - GM/r = GM/2a • Lp/mp = [Gma(1 -e2)]1/2 • r2df/dt = L/mp • rperi = a(1-e)
How does Kozai work? • The effect works on times much longer than the orbital period of either object, so imagine that the mass of both planet and secondary star is distributed in a ring around the primary. • If the rings have a mutual inclination i, they will exert a torque on each other; T is perpendicular to L, so the orbits exchange angular momentum, but total L=const., as is the component of Lp and LB along L. These are called Kozai constants.
Ltotal Lp Kozai constants
How does Kozai work? • For low i, the apsidal line (from star to periapse) undergoes a prograde precession, while the nodal line (where the two orbit planes intersect) undergoes a retrograde precession with the same frequency • As a result there are only small oscillations of i and e
Ltotal Lp How does Kozai work? • For high enough i, the apsidal line precession slows and eventually reverses, becoming prograde. A resonance occurs when the precession rate of the apsidal line equals that of the nodal line. • As noted above, the mutual torque of the two rings is always along the nodal line, so it cannot affect the z component of Lp; the projection Lpz of Lp along L is fixed, but |Lp| will oscillate, as angular momentum is drained out of and back into the orbit of the planet
Ltotal Lp How does Kozai work? • As Lp = [a(1-e2)]1/2, a decrease in i corresponds to a decrease in Lp, which in turn corresponds to an increase in e. • However, Lpz is constant, so Lp will not go to zero; when Lp=Lpz the angular moment will begin to flow from the outer orbit back into the planet’s orbit
Tides • The Kozai mechanism reduces e, but does not affect the semimajor axis a. • However, the periapse rp=a(1-e) (the closest approach to the star) does shrink • For I large enough, rp can approach the stellar radius • When it does, the star raises a substantial tidal bulge on the planet; since the planet is no longer spherical, the mutual gravitational attraction of the planet and star is no longer given by just 1/r2. The extra force induces a rapid precesion of the apsidal line, halting the Kozai-induced reduction of the periapse
Tides • While the periapse is held at a small value, tidal dissipation removes energy but not angular momentum from the orbit of the planet; hence a is reduced but rp is held fixed. This is effectively migration.
Binary Star Model Ingredients • The model assumes that the mutual inclination of proto-planetary disk and binary orbit are random (there is weak evidence for this) • P(aB) and P(q) are take from observations • The frequency of planets in binary systems is assumed to be similar to that around single stars (some evidence for this from current surveys)
Predictions • Kozai migration implies that many short period planets will be in binary star systems; the frequency of binarity will be higher for short period systems than for long period systems • Kozai planets will inhabit dynamically empty systems • Kozai migration leaves planets with a substantial inclination to the spin of the primary star (Rossiter-McLaughlin effect) • Transiting Kozai planets will have secondary stars orbiting near the plane of the sky.
Kozai In Single Star Systems • The Kozai mechanism does not require a stellar companion to work: a second planet can also do the job • The trick is to get a large mutual inclination • Several groups have studied this
Why should you believe a theorist? • “An observational result should not be believed until it is confirmed by theory” • A theoretical result should not be believed until it is confirmed by observation • A numerical result should not be believed until it is confirmed by both
Rossiter-McLaughlin Effect Fabrycky & Winn 2009
HAT-P-7b retrograde orbit Winn et al. 0908.1672
Conclusions • The Kozai mechanism must operate in binary star systems with single planets • It will produce highly inclined (including retrograde) orbits • It can also operate in multiplanet systems, possibly with mutual inclinations generated by planet-planet scattering. • Such highly inclined orbits are now seen (4/14, 2 retrograde)