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Tilting Styx and Nix but not Uranus with a Spin-Precession-Mean-motion resonance
Authors:Alice C Quillen  Yuan-Yuan Chen  Benoît Noyelles  Santiago Loane
Institution:1.Department of Physics and Astronomy,University of Rochester,Rochester,USA;2.Key Laboratory of Planetary Sciences, Purple Mountain Observatory,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Nanjing,China;3.Department of Mathematics, Namur Centre for Complex Systems (naXys),University of Namur,Namur,Belgium
Abstract:A Hamiltonian model is constructed for the spin axis of a planet perturbed by a nearby planet with both planets in orbit about a star. We expand the planet–planet gravitational potential perturbation to first order in orbital inclinations and eccentricities, finding terms describing spin resonances involving the spin precession rate and the two planetary mean motions. Convergent planetary migration allows the spinning planet to be captured into spin resonance. With initial obliquity near zero, the spin resonance can lift the planet’s obliquity to near 90\(^\circ \) or 180\(^\circ \) depending upon whether the spin resonance is first or zeroth order in inclination. Past capture of Uranus into such a spin resonance could give an alternative non-collisional scenario accounting for Uranus’s high obliquity. However, we find that the time spent in spin resonance must be so long that this scenario cannot be responsible for Uranus’s high obliquity. Our model can be used to study spin resonance in satellite systems. Our Hamiltonian model explains how Styx and Nix can be tilted to high obliquity via outward migration of Charon, a phenomenon previously seen in numerical simulations.
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