Effect of the stellar spin history on the tidal evolution of close-in planets
Emeline Bolmont, Sean N. Raymond, Jeremy Leconte, and Sean P. Matt

TL;DR
This study explores how stellar spin history influences the tidal evolution and survival of close-in planets, revealing complex interactions that affect planetary and stellar long-term evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of how different stellar spin profiles impact the orbital evolution of close-in planets around Sun-like stars and M-dwarfs using a standard tidal model.
Findings
Fast stellar spin early on helps planets survive initial evolution.
Surviving early evolution can lead to late mergers, especially around Sun-like stars.
Stellar spin history complicates the interpretation of current planetary configurations.
Abstract
We investigate how the evolution of the stellar spin rate affects, and is affected by, planets in close orbits, via star-planet tidal interactions. To do this, we used a standard equilibrium tidal model to compute the orbital evolution of single planets orbiting both Sun-like stars and 0.1 M\odot M-dwarfs. We tested two stellar spin evolution profiles, one with fast initial rotation (P=1.2 day) and one with slow initial rotation (P=8 day). We tested the effect of varying the stellar and planetary dissipation and the planet's mass and initial orbital radius. Conclusions: Tidal evolution allows to differentiate the early behaviors of extremely close-in planets orbiting either a rapidly rotating star or a slowly rotating star. The early spin-up of the star allows the close-in planets around fast rotators to survive the early evolution. For planets around M-dwarfs, surviving the early…
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