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Transit Probabilities in Secularly Evolving Planetary Systems

Authors :
Matthew J. Read
Amaury H. M. J. Triaud
Mark C. Wyatt
Wyatt, Mark [0000-0001-9064-5598]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
arXiv, 2017.

Abstract

This paper considers whether the population of known transiting exoplanets provides evidence for additional outer planets on inclined orbits, due to the perturbing effect of such planets on the orbits of inner planets. As such, we develop a semi-analytical method for calculating the probability that two mutually inclined planets are observed to transit. We subsequently derive a simplified analytical form to describe how the mutual inclination between two planets evolves due to secular interactions with a wide orbit inclined planet and use this to determine the mean probability that the two inner planets are observed to transit. From application to Kepler-48 and HD-106315 we constrain the inclinations of the outer planets in these systems (known from RV). We also apply this work to the so called Kepler Dichotomy, which describes the excess of single transiting systems observed by Kepler. We find 3 different ways of explaining this dichotomy: some systems could be inherently single, some multi-planet systems could have inherently large mutual inclinations, while some multi-planet systems could cyclically attain large mutual inclinations through interaction with an inclined outer planet. We show how the different mechanisms can be combined to fit the observed populations of Kepler systems with one and two transiting planets. We also show how the distribution of mutual inclinations of transiting two planet systems constrains the fraction of two planet systems that have perturbing outer planets, since such systems should be preferentially discovered by Kepler when the inner planets are coplanar due to an increased transit probability.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....67a883710fb4809ce737208dc719dce0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1703.10046