THE FATE OF MOONS OF CLOSE-IN GIANT EXOPLANETS

Fathi Namouni
2010 Astrophysical Journal Letters  
We show that the fate of moons of a close-in giant planet is mainly determined by the migration history of the planet in the protoplanetary disk. As the planet migrates in the disk from beyond the snow line towards a multi-day period orbit, the formed and forming moons become unstable as the planet's sphere of influence shrinks. Disk-driven migration is faster than the moons' tidal orbital evolution. Moons are eventually ejected from around close-in exoplanets or forced into collision with them
more » ... before tides from the star affect their orbits. If moons are detected around close-in exoplanets, they are unlikely to have been formed in situ, instead they were captured from the protoplanetary disk on retrograde orbits around the planets.
doi:10.1088/2041-8205/719/2/l145 fatcat:jywolwpxv5eexeqyhs4mgydcme