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| Format: | Preprint |
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2026
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| Online Access: | https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.14433 |
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| _version_ | 1866917494407561216 |
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| author | Fan, Qianli Liu, Shang-Fei |
| author_facet | Fan, Qianli Liu, Shang-Fei |
| contents | The origin of hot Jupiters remains a key open question. In the high-eccentricity migration scenario, traditional coreless models predict a strict tidal exclusion zone within $\sim 2.7$ tidal radii $r_\textrm{t}$, in which giant planets are either fully disrupted or ejected. We revisit this limit using three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of giant planets with realistic dense cores (10 - 20 $M_\oplus$). We find that even a few-percent-mass core fundamentally changes the outcome: \textbf{no total disruptions} occur within the previously suggested destruction zone ($\lesssim 2.7 \, r_\textrm{t}$). For deep encounters ($\lesssim 1.7 \, r_\textrm{t}$) planets suffer severe envelope stripping and are either progressively downsized to dense remnants or ejected after a few close encounters, possibly contributing to the free-floating planet population. In the intermediate regime ($ \sim 1.7 $--$2.0, r_\mathrm{t}$), planets experience significant partial mass loss over repeated encounters. For wider encounters ($ \gtrsim 2.0\, r_\mathrm{t} $), mass loss is minimal, allowing the planets gradually circularize into hot Jupiters. Furthermore, we show that for highly eccentric orbits ($e\gtrsim 0.9$), the change in specific orbital energy $ ΔE_{\mathrm{orb}} $ depends primarily on periastron distance $ r_\mathrm{p} $ rather than semi-major axis $ a $. This enables us to extrapolate our fixed-$ a $ results across a broad ($a$, $e$) parameter space and identify a well-defined tidal ejection zone whose sharp boundaries converge asymptotically. Our results highlight the crucial role of planetary internal structure in high-eccentricity migration and suggest that the survival and transformation of core-bearing giant planets are far more common than previously thought. |
| format | Preprint |
| id |
arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_14433 |
| institution | arXiv |
| publishDate | 2026 |
| record_format | arxiv |
| spellingShingle | Where Do Hot Jupiters Come From? Revisiting Tidal Disruption and Ejection in High-Eccentricity Migration Fan, Qianli Liu, Shang-Fei Earth and Planetary Astrophysics The origin of hot Jupiters remains a key open question. In the high-eccentricity migration scenario, traditional coreless models predict a strict tidal exclusion zone within $\sim 2.7$ tidal radii $r_\textrm{t}$, in which giant planets are either fully disrupted or ejected. We revisit this limit using three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of giant planets with realistic dense cores (10 - 20 $M_\oplus$). We find that even a few-percent-mass core fundamentally changes the outcome: \textbf{no total disruptions} occur within the previously suggested destruction zone ($\lesssim 2.7 \, r_\textrm{t}$). For deep encounters ($\lesssim 1.7 \, r_\textrm{t}$) planets suffer severe envelope stripping and are either progressively downsized to dense remnants or ejected after a few close encounters, possibly contributing to the free-floating planet population. In the intermediate regime ($ \sim 1.7 $--$2.0, r_\mathrm{t}$), planets experience significant partial mass loss over repeated encounters. For wider encounters ($ \gtrsim 2.0\, r_\mathrm{t} $), mass loss is minimal, allowing the planets gradually circularize into hot Jupiters. Furthermore, we show that for highly eccentric orbits ($e\gtrsim 0.9$), the change in specific orbital energy $ ΔE_{\mathrm{orb}} $ depends primarily on periastron distance $ r_\mathrm{p} $ rather than semi-major axis $ a $. This enables us to extrapolate our fixed-$ a $ results across a broad ($a$, $e$) parameter space and identify a well-defined tidal ejection zone whose sharp boundaries converge asymptotically. Our results highlight the crucial role of planetary internal structure in high-eccentricity migration and suggest that the survival and transformation of core-bearing giant planets are far more common than previously thought. |
| title | Where Do Hot Jupiters Come From? Revisiting Tidal Disruption and Ejection in High-Eccentricity Migration |
| topic | Earth and Planetary Astrophysics |
| url | https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.14433 |