Tidal dissipation and eccentricity pumping: Implications for the depth of the secondary eclipse of 55 Cnc e
Emeline Bolmont, Franck Selsis, Sean N. Raymond, Jeremy Leconte,, Franck Hersant, Anne-Sophie Maurin, and Jessica Pericaud

TL;DR
This study examines how tidal heating and planet-planet interactions influence the observable eclipse depth of 55 Cnc e, revealing that tidal effects can significantly impact the planet's thermal emission and albedo estimates.
Contribution
It demonstrates that tidal heating can affect eclipse observations and provides a method to constrain planetary eccentricity and internal dissipation rates through combined modeling and simulations.
Findings
Eccentricity can significantly influence thermal emission measurements.
Tidal heating can increase the planet's apparent albedo to as high as 0.9.
Maximum eccentricity constrained to e<0.015 for Earth's dissipation constant.
Abstract
We use the super Earth 55 Cnc e as a case study to address an observable effect of tidal heating. We investigate whether planet-planet interactions can force the eccentricity of this planet to a level affecting the eclipse depth observed with Spitzer. Using the constant time lag tidal model, we first calculate the observed planet flux as a function of albedo and eccentricity, for different tidal dissipation constants and for two extreme cases: a planet with no heat redistribution and a planet with full heat redistribution. We derive the values of albedo and eccentricity that match the observed transit depth. We then perform N-body simulations of the planetary system including tides and General Relativity to follow the evolution of the eccentricity of planet e. We compare the range of eccentricities given by the simulations with the eccentricities required to alter the eclipse depth. We…
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