Tidal heating of Earth-like exoplanets around M stars: Thermal, magnetic, and orbital evolutions
Peter Driscoll, Rory Barnes

TL;DR
This study models the thermal, magnetic, and orbital evolution of Earth-like exoplanets around M stars, revealing how tidal heating influences habitability, magnetic field generation, and orbital dynamics over billions of years.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled thermal-orbital evolution model calibrated to Earth, highlighting the impact of tidal dissipation on planetary habitability and magnetic field sustainability.
Findings
Planets around 0.1 solar-mass stars circularize within 10 Gyr.
Tidal heating can inhibit dynamo action in eccentric planets.
Tidal dissipation is less significant in habitable zones of larger stars.
Abstract
The internal thermal and magnetic evolution of rocky exoplanets is critical to their habitability. We focus on the thermal-orbital evolution of Earth-mass planets around low mass M stars whose radiative habitable zone overlaps with the "tidal zone". We develop a thermal-orbital evolution model calibrated to Earth that couples tidal dissipation, with a temperature-dependent Maxwell rheology, to orbital circularization and migration. We illustrate thermal-orbital steady states where surface heat flow is balanced by tidal dissipation and cooling can be stalled for billions of years until circularization occurs. Orbital energy dissipated as tidal heat in the interior drives both inward migration and circularization, with a circularization time that is inversely proportional to the dissipation rate. We identify a peak in the internal dissipation rate as the mantle passes through a…
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