Tidal torques. A critical review of some techniques
Michael Efroimsky, James G. Williams

TL;DR
This paper critically reviews tidal torque calculation methods, highlighting limitations of the MacDonald formula, proposing corrections, and discussing rheological implications for planetary despinning and libration damping.
Contribution
It clarifies the validity limits of common tidal torque formulas and introduces corrections for higher-order effects and rheological complexities.
Findings
MacDonald formula valid only at zeroth order of e/Q
Kaula series equivalent to corrected MacDonald approach under certain conditions
Rheologies with Q scaling as frequency^positive power are physically plausible when mathematical flaws are addressed
Abstract
We point out that the MacDonald formula for body-tide torques is valid only in the zeroth order of e/Q, while its time-average is valid in the first order. So the formula cannot be used for analysis in higher orders of e/Q. This necessitates corrections in the theory of tidal despinning and libration damping. We prove that when the inclination is low and phase lags are linear in frequency, the Kaula series is equivalent to a corrected version of the MacDonald method. The correction to MacDonald's approach would be to set the phase lag of the integral bulge proportional to the instantaneous frequency. The equivalence of descriptions gets violated by a nonlinear frequency-dependence of the lag. We explain that both the MacDonald- and Darwin-torque-based derivations of the popular formula for the tidal despinning rate are limited to low inclinations and to the phase lags being linear…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBelt Conveyor Systems Engineering
