Can brown dwarfs survive on close orbits around convective stars?
Cilia Damiani, Rodrigo D\'iaz

TL;DR
This study investigates the survival prospects of brown dwarf companions on close orbits around different types of stars, highlighting how stellar properties influence orbital decay and the observed distribution of such systems.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of tidal decay timescales across stellar types, explaining the scarcity of close-orbit brown dwarfs around G and K stars and suggesting formation or detection biases for M stars.
Findings
F-type stars can host brown dwarfs longer than G-type stars at similar periods.
Orbital decay timescales are shorter for early M-type stars despite their efficient tidal dissipation.
For periods over 10 days, brown dwarf occurrence is unaffected by tidal decay.
Abstract
Brown dwarfs straddle the mass range transition from planetary to stellar objects. There is a relative paucity of brown dwarfs companions around FGKM stars compared to exoplanets for orbital periods less than a few years, but most of the short-period brown dwarf companions fully characterised by transits and radial velocities are found around F-type stars. We examine the hypothesis that brown dwarf companions could not survive on close orbit around stars with important convective envelopes because the tides and angular momentum loss through magnetic breaking should lead to a rapid orbital decay and quick engulfment of the companion. We use a classical Skumanich-type braking law, and constant time-lag tidal theory to assess the characteristic timescale for orbital decay for the brown dwarf mass range as a function of the host properties. We find that F-type stars may host massive…
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