HD 164604 c: a second giant planet on a 15-yr orbit and the constraint of the planet-planet mutual inclination
Abstract
We report the discovery of a new massive giant planet, HD 164604 c (ac = 5.556-0.10+0.093 au, ec = 0.196-0.078+0.078 and mc = 9.5-1.25+1.2 or 7.6-1.0+1.0\,M Jup), orbiting a K3.5 dwarf, The result is based on the combined analysis of high-precision radial-velocity data, Hipparcos, and Gaia DR2 and DR3 astrometry. We refine the orbital parameters of the inner planet HD 164604 b to ab = 1.362-0.012+0.012 au, eb = 0.479-0.021+0.027, and mb = 13.2-1.5+1.8\,M Jup (or 8.8-1.5+1.9\,M Jup). Depending on the two possible orbital orientations of HD 164604 c, the true mutual inclination between the two planets is bc=5.0+3.7-2.2 (prograde) or 162.1+7.1-4.7 (retrograde). Long-term N-body integrations show that most orbits with the retrograde configuration remain dynamically stable for at least 10 Myr, while orbits with the prograde motion might rapidly evolve into chaos or lead to ejection. The retrograde architecture points to a violent dynamical history, possibly involving von Zeipel-Lidov-Kozai cycles or three-body scattering, while the prograde scenario might be consistent with coplanar and mild disk migration. Future Gaia DR4 astrometry will break the inclination degeneracy and distinguish between prograde and retrograde orbits for HD 164604 c.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.