Scaling laws to understand tidal dissipation in fluid planetary regions and stars I - Rotation, stratification and thermal diffusivity
P. Auclair-Desrotour, S. Mathis, C. Le Poncin-Lafitte

TL;DR
This paper develops analytical scaling laws for tidal dissipation in fluid planetary and stellar interiors, highlighting the influence of rotation, stratification, and diffusivities on resonance behaviors and energy dissipation rates.
Contribution
It provides explicit formulas for tidal wave dissipation as functions of fluid parameters and introduces scaling laws for resonance features, advancing understanding of tidal energy loss mechanisms.
Findings
Resonance sensitivity varies with system parameters.
Scaling laws quantify resonance frequency, width, and amplitude.
Internal physics critically affects tidal dissipation efficiency.
Abstract
Tidal dissipation in planets and stars is one of the key physical mechanisms driving the evolution of star-planet and planet-moon systems. Several signatures of its action are observed in planetary systems thanks to their orbital architecture and the rotational state of their components. Tidal dissipation inside the fluid layers of celestial bodies are intrinsically linked to the dynamics and the physical properties of the latter. This complex dependence must be characterized. We compute the tidal kinetic energy dissipated by viscous friction and thermal diffusion in a rotating local fluid Cartesian section of a star/planet/moon submitted to a periodic tidal forcing. The properties of tidal gravito-inertial waves excited by the perturbation are derived analytically as explicit functions of the tidal frequency and local fluid parameters (i.e. the rotation, the buoyancy frequency…
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