Tidal inertial waves in the differentially rotating convective envelopes of low-mass stars - I. Free oscillation modes
M. Guenel, C. Baruteau, S. Mathis, M. Rieutord

TL;DR
This paper investigates how differential rotation in low-mass stars affects inertial wave propagation in their convective envelopes, revealing new mode families and resonance behaviors that influence tidal dissipation.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical and numerical study of inertial modes in differentially rotating stellar envelopes, identifying new mode families and resonance phenomena.
Findings
D modes behave like solid-body rotation modes.
DT modes propagate in restricted regions of the convective zone.
Shear layers focus towards attractors and can cross corotation resonances.
Abstract
Star-planet tidal interactions may result in the excitation of inertial waves in the convective region of stars. In low-mass stars, their dissipation plays a prominent role in the long-term orbital evolution of short-period planets. Turbulent convection can sustain differential rotation in their envelope, with an equatorial acceleration (as in the Sun) or deceleration, which can modify the waves' propagation properties. We explore in this first paper the general propagation properties of free linear inertial waves in a differentially rotating homogeneous fluid inside a spherical shell. We assume that the angular velocity background flow depends on the latitudinal coordinate only, close to what is expected in the external convective envelope of low-mass stars. We use i) an analytical approach in the inviscid case to get the dispersion relation, from which we compute the characteristic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Astro and Planetary Science
