
TL;DR
This paper models how magnetic interactions between hot Jupiters and their host stars can create observable chromospheric hot spots, explaining phase differences and activity modulation linked to the planets.
Contribution
It introduces a magnetohydrostatic model of stellar magnetic fields that accounts for star-planet magnetic reconnection effects on chromospheric activity.
Findings
Model explains observed hot spot phases in several star-planet systems.
Reconnection events can influence stellar activity patterns.
The model accounts for seasonal and orbital modulation of activity.
Abstract
Recent observations suggest that stellar magnetic activity may be influenced by the presence of a close-by giant planet. Specifically, chromospheric hot spots rotating in phase with the planet orbital motion have been observed during some seasons in a few stars harbouring hot Jupiters. The spot leads the subplanetary point by a typical amount of about 60-70 degrees, with the extreme case of upsilon And where the angle is about 170 degrees. The interaction between the star and the planet is described considering the reconnection between the stellar coronal field and the magnetic field of the planet. Reconnection events produce energetic particles that moving along magnetic field lines impact onto the stellar chromosphere giving rise to a localized hot spot. A simple magnetohydrostatic model is introduced to describe the coronal magnetic field of the star connecting its surface to the…
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