research

Predicting Planets in Known Extra-Solar Planetary Systems II: Testing for Saturn-mass Planets

Abstract

Recent results have shown that many of the known extrasolar planetary systems contain regions which are stable for massless test particles. We examine the possibility that Saturn-mass planets exist in these systems, just below the detection threshold, and attempt to predict likely orbital parameters for such unseen planets. To do this, we insert a Saturn-mass planet into the stable regions of these systems and integrate its orbit for 100 million years. We conduct 200-600 of these experiments to test parameter space in HD37124, HD38529, 55Cnc, and HD74156. In HD37124 the global maximum of the survival rate of Saturns in parameter space is at semimajor axis a = 1.03 AU, eccentricity e=0.1. In HD38529, only 5% of Saturns are unstable, and the region in which a Saturn could survive is very broad, centered on 0.5<a<0.6, e<0.2. In 55Cnc we find three maxima at (a,e) = (1.0 AU, 0.02), (2.0 AU, 0.08), and (3.0 AU, 0.17). In HD74156 we find a broad maximum with aa = 0.9-1.2 AU, e<=0.15. Several of these maxima are located in the habitable zones of their parent stars and are therefore of astrobiological interest. We suggest the possibility that companions may lie in these locations of parameter space, and encourage further observational investigation of these systems.Comment: submitted to ApJ 9 pages, 8 figures, 3 table

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions

    Last time updated on 03/12/2019