Elliptical instability in hot Jupiter systems
David C\'ebron (ETHZ, IRPHE), Michael Le Bars (IRPHE), Patrice Le Gal, (IRPHE), Claire Moutou (OAMP), J. Leconte (LMD), Alban Sauret (IRPHE)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the role of elliptical instability in hot Jupiter systems, proposing it as a significant mechanism for tidal dissipation affecting stellar and planetary dynamics, supported by numerical simulations and theoretical analysis.
Contribution
It introduces the elliptical instability as a key tidal dissipation mechanism in gaseous bodies within hot Jupiter systems, using simulations and theoretical models to explore its effects.
Findings
Elliptical instability can grow in rotating, tidally deformed gaseous bodies.
Compressibility has limited impact on the amplitude of the instability.
The instability's amplitude is comparable in both incompressible and compressible models.
Abstract
Several studies have already considered the influence of tides on the evolution of systems composed of a star and a close-in companion to tentatively explain different observations such as the spin-up of some stars with hot Jupiters, the radius anomaly of short orbital period planets and the synchronization or quasi-synchronization of the stellar spin in some extreme cases. However, the nature of the mechanism responsible for the tidal dissipation in such systems remains uncertain. In this paper, we claim that the so-called elliptical instability may play a major role in these systems, explaining some systematic features present in the observations. This hydrodynamic instability, arising in rotating flows with elliptical streamlines, is suspected to be present in both planet and star of such systems, which are elliptically deformed by tides. The presence and the influence of the…
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