Evolution of Spin Direction of Accreting Magnetic Protostars and Spin-Orbit Misalignment in Exoplanetary Systems: II. Warped Discs
Francois Foucart, Dong Lai

TL;DR
This paper investigates how magnetic interactions induce warping in protoplanetary discs and influence stellar spin orientation, potentially explaining observed spin-orbit misalignments in exoplanetary systems.
Contribution
It models the dynamics of warped discs considering magnetic torques and internal stresses, showing how steady-state warps form and affect star-disc alignment.
Findings
Disc warps reach steady-state quickly compared to stellar spin evolution.
Steady-state discs are generally only slightly warped, lying approximately in a single plane.
Magnetic torques can either align or misalign stellar spins with discs, affecting planetary system inclinations.
Abstract
Magnetic interactions between a protostar and its accretion disc tend to induce warping in the disc and produce secular changes in the stellar spin direction, so that the spin axis may not always be perpendicular to the disc. This may help explain the recently observed spin-orbit misalignment in a number of exoplanetary systems. We study the dynamics of warped protoplanetary discs under the combined effects of magnetic warping/precession torques and internal stresses in the disc, including viscous damping of warps and propagation of bending waves. We show that when the outer disc axis is misaligned with the stellar spin axis, the disc evolves towards a warped steady-state on a timescale that depends on the disc viscosity or the bending wave propagation speed, but in all cases is much shorter than the timescale for the spin evolution (of order of a million years). Moreover, for the most…
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