English

Predicting the long-term stability of compact multiplanet systems

Earth and Planetary Astrophysics 2020-07-15 v2

Abstract

We combine analytical understanding of resonant dynamics in two-planet systems with machine learning techniques to train a model capable of robustly classifying stability in compact multi-planet systems over long timescales of 10910^9 orbits. Our Stability of Planetary Orbital Configurations Klassifier (SPOCK) predicts stability using physically motivated summary statistics measured in integrations of the first 10410^4 orbits, thus achieving speed-ups of up to 10510^5 over full simulations. This computationally opens up the stability constrained characterization of multi-planet systems. Our model, trained on 100,000\approx 100,000 three-planet systems sampled at discrete resonances, generalizes both to a sample spanning a continuous period-ratio range, as well as to a large five-planet sample with qualitatively different configurations to our training dataset. Our approach significantly outperforms previous methods based on systems' angular momentum deficit, chaos indicators, and parametrized fits to numerical integrations. We use SPOCK to constrain the free eccentricities between the inner and outer pairs of planets in the Kepler-431 system of three approximately Earth-sized planets to both be below 0.05. Our stability analysis provides significantly stronger eccentricity constraints than currently achievable through either radial velocity or transit duration measurements for small planets, and within a factor of a few of systems that exhibit transit timing variations (TTVs). Given that current exoplanet detection strategies now rarely allow for strong TTV constraints (Hadden et al., 2019), SPOCK enables a powerful complementary method for precisely characterizing compact multi-planet systems. We publicly release SPOCK for community use.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2007.06521,
  title  = {Predicting the long-term stability of compact multiplanet systems},
  author = {Daniel Tamayo and Miles Cranmer and Samuel Hadden and Hanno Rein and Peter Battaglia and Alysa Obertas and Philip J. Armitage and Shirley Ho and David Spergel and Christian Gilbertson and Naireen Hussain and Ari Silburt and Daniel Jontof-Hutter and Kristen Menou},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2007.06521},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Published week of July 13th in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: https://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.2001258117. Check out simple usage of package (and regenerate paper figures) at: https://github.com/dtamayo/spock

R2 v1 2026-06-23T17:05:01.935Z