Optical and X-ray Transients from Planet-Star Mergers
Brian D. Metzger (Princeton), Dimitrios Giannios (Princeton), David S., Spiegel (IAS)

TL;DR
This paper models the observable electromagnetic signatures of planet-star mergers, predicting diverse transient phenomena depending on planetary and stellar densities, and suggests observational strategies for detection.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical framework for the electromagnetic signatures of planet-star mergers, including different outcomes based on density ratios and their observational implications.
Findings
EUV/soft X-ray transients weeks to months before merger
Optical transients peaking at 10^37-38 erg/s lasting days
Distinctive features compared to classical novae, such as lower ejecta velocity
Abstract
We evaluate the prompt observational signatures of the merger between a massive close-in planet (a `hot Jupiter') and its host star, events with an estimated Galactic rate of ~0.1-1/yr. Depending on the ratio of the mean density of the planet rho_p to that of the star rho_star, a merger results in three possible outcomes. If rho_p/rho_star > 5, then the planet directly plunges below the stellar atmosphere before being disrupted by tidal forces. Dissipation of orbital energy creates a hot wake behind the planet, producing a EUV/soft X-ray transient as the planet sinks below the stellar surface. The peak luminosity L_X ~ 1e36 erg/s is achieved weeks-months prior to merger, after which the stellar surface is enshrouded by an outflow. The final inspiral is accompanied by an optical transient powered by the recombination of hydrogen in the outflow, which peaks at L~1e37-38 erg/s on a…
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