Gas giants orbiting their host star within the ice line are thought to have
migrated to their current locations from farther out. Here we consider the
origin and dynamical evolution of observed Jupiters, focusing on hot and warm
Jupiters with outer friends. We show that the majority of the observed Jupiter
pairs (twenty out of twenty-four) will be dynamically unstable if the inner
planet was placed at >~1AU distance from the stellar host. This finding is at
odds with formation theories that invoke the migration of such planets from
semi-major axes >~1AU due to secular dynamical processes (e.g., secular chaos,
Lidov-Kozai oscillations) coupled with tidal dissipation. In fact, the results
of N-body integrations show that the evolution of dynamically unstable systems
does not lead to tidal migration but rather to planet ejections and collisions
with the host star. This and other arguments lead us to suggest that most of
the observed planets with a companion could not have been transported from
further out through secular migration processes. More generally, by using a
combination of numerical and analytic techniques we show that the high-e
Lidov-Kozai migration scenario can only account for less than 10% of all gas
giants observed between 0.1-1 AU. Simulations of multi-planet systems support
this result. Our study indicates that rather than starting on highly eccentric
orbits with orbital periods above one year, these "warm" Jupiters are more
likely to have reached the region where they are observed today without having
experienced significant tidal dissipation.Comment: Accepted to AAS journals (AJ). 15 pages, 9 figure