The variation of tidal dissipation in the convective envelope of low-mass stars along their evolution
S. Mathis

TL;DR
This study analytically investigates how tidal dissipation in the convective envelopes of low-mass stars varies with stellar mass, age, and rotation, revealing significant differences across evolutionary stages and stellar types.
Contribution
It provides a simplified analytical model to evaluate frequency-averaged tidal dissipation across different stellar masses and evolutionary stages, enhancing understanding of star-planet interactions.
Findings
Tidal dissipation increases during Pre-Main-Sequence for fixed rotation.
Maximum dissipation occurs around 0.6 solar masses (K-type stars).
Dissipation decreases significantly with increasing stellar mass on the Main Sequence.
Abstract
Since 1995, more than 1500 exoplanets have been discovered around a large diversity of host stars (from M- to A-type stars). Tidal dissipation in stellar convective envelopes is a key actor that shapes the orbital architecture of short-period systems. Our objective is to understand and evaluate how tidal dissipation in the convective envelope of low-mass stars (from M to F types) depends on their mass, evolutionary stage and rotation. Using a simplified two-layer assumption, we compute analytically the frequency-averaged tidal dissipation in their convective envelope. This dissipation is due to the conversion into heat of the kinetic energy of tidal non wave-like/equilibrium flow and inertial waves because of the viscous friction applied by turbulent convection. Using grids of stellar models allows us to study the variation of the dissipation as a function of stellar mass and age on the…
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