Tides and Tidal Engulfment in Post-Main Sequence Binaries: Period Gaps for Planets and Brown Dwarfs Around White Dwarfs
J. Nordhaus (Princeton), D. S. Spiegel, L. Ibgui, J. Goodman, A., Burrows

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of binary systems through post-main-sequence phases to predict period gaps for planets and brown dwarfs around white dwarfs, considering tidal effects and common envelope phases.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled stellar and tidal evolution model to predict orbital period gaps for low-mass companions around white dwarfs, incorporating effects of mass loss and tidal interactions.
Findings
Predicts no Jupiter-mass companions with periods less than 270 days for 1 M_sun progenitors.
Identifies a period gap between 0.1 and 380 days for systems with more massive companions.
Results align with observed brown dwarf and planet orbits around white dwarfs.
Abstract
The presence of a close, low-mass companion is thought to play a substantial and perhaps necessary role in shaping post-Asymptotic Giant Branch and Planetary Nebula outflows. During post-main-sequence evolution, radial expansion of the primary star, accompanied by intense winds, can significantly alter the binary orbit via tidal dissipation and mass loss. To investigate this, we couple stellar evolution models (from the zero-age main-sequence through the end of the post-main sequence) to a tidal evolution code. The binary's fate is determined by the initial masses of the primary and the companion, the initial orbit (taken to be circular), and the Reimers mass-loss parameter. For a range of these parameters, we determine whether the orbit expands due to mass loss or decays due to tidal torques. Where a common envelope (CE) phase ensues, we estimate the final orbital separation based on…
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