Anelastic tidal dissipation in multi-layer planets
F. Remus, S. Mathis, J.-P. Zahn, V. Lainey

TL;DR
This paper models anelastic tidal dissipation in multi-layer planets, analyzing how solid regions' rheology and internal structure influence tidal deformation and energy dissipation, with implications for planetary evolution.
Contribution
It provides a general method to compute Love numbers for planets with viscoelastic cores or mantles, accounting for fluid envelopes and frequency-dependent rheology.
Findings
Tidal dissipation in solid cores can be significant and comparable to fluid layer dissipation.
The model links internal structure and rheology to observable tidal responses.
Results can be used to predict planetary evolution timescales.
Abstract
Earth-like planets have viscoelastic mantles, whereas giant planets may have viscoelastic cores. The tidal dissipation of such solid regions, gravitationally perturbed by a companion body, highly depends on their rheology and on the tidal frequency. Therefore, modelling tidal interactions presents a high interest to provide constraints on planets' properties and to understand their history and their evolution, in our Solar System or in exoplanetary systems. We examine the equilibrium tide in the anelastic parts of a planet whatever the rheology, taking into account the presence of a fluid envelope of constant density. We show how to obtain the different Love numbers that describe its tidal deformation. Thus, we discuss how the tidal dissipation in solid parts depends on the planet's internal structure and rheology. Finally, we show how the results may be implemented to describe the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
