Close encounters of a rotating star with planets in parabolic orbits of varying inclination and the formation of Hot Jupiters
P. B. Ivanov, J. C. B. Papaloizou

TL;DR
This paper extends the theory of close planetary encounters with rotating stars to include tidal effects, analyzing how these interactions influence the formation of Hot Jupiters and the orbital characteristics of planets.
Contribution
It introduces a combined analytic and numerical framework for tidal interactions during parabolic encounters, considering arbitrary inclinations and stellar rotation effects on orbit evolution.
Findings
Tides can significantly decrease orbital semi-major axes for close periastron distances.
Tidal effects are stronger in retrograde orbits compared to prograde.
Stellar rotation biases the formation of retrograde close-in planets.
Abstract
(abbreviated) We extend the theory of close encounters of a planet on a parabolic orbit with a star to include the effects of tides induced on the central rotating star. Orbits with arbitrary inclination to the stellar rotation axis are considered. We obtain results both from an analytic treatment and numerical one that are in satisfactory agreement. These results are applied to the initial phase of the tidal circularisation problem. We find that both tides induced in the star and planet can lead to a significant decrease of the orbital semi-major axis for orbits having periastron distances smaller than 5-6 stellar radii (corresponding to periods days after the circularisation has been completed) with tides in the star being much stronger for retrograde orbits compared to prograde orbits. We use the simple Skumanich law for the stellar rotation with its rotational period…
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