The chance that a planetary system will interact with another member of its
host star's nascent cluster would be greatly increased if gas giant planets
form in situ on wide orbits. In this paper, we explore the outcomes of
planet-planet scattering for a distribution of multiplanet systems that all
have one of the planets on an initial orbit of 100 AU. The scattering
experiments are run with and without stellar flybys. We convolve the outcomes
with distributions for protoplanetary disk and stellar cluster sizes to
generalize the results where possible. We find that the frequencies of large
mutual inclinations and high eccentricities are sensitive to the number of
planets in a system, but not strongly to stellar flybys. However, flybys do
play a role in changing the low and moderate portions of the mutual inclination
distributions, and erase dynamically cold initial conditions on average.
Wide-orbit planets can be mixed throughout the planetary system, and in some
cases, can potentially become hot Jupiters, which we demonstrate using
scattering experiments that include a tidal damping model. If planets form on
wide orbits in situ, then there will be discernible differences in the proper
motion distributions of a sample of wide-orbit planets compared with a pure
scattering formation mechanism. Stellar flybys can enhance the frequency of
ejections in planetary systems, but auto-ionization is likely to remain the
dominant source of free-floating planets.Comment: Accepted for publication by Ap