Star-planet interactions: I. Stellar rotation and planetary orbits
Giovanni Privitera, Georges Meynet, Patrick Eggenberger, Aline A., Vidotto, Eva Villaver, Michele Bianda

TL;DR
This paper develops self-consistent models of stellar and planetary orbital evolution, incorporating rotational effects and angular momentum exchange, to better understand star-planet interactions and their impact on stellar rotation and planetary survival.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model that simultaneously accounts for stellar rotation, orbital evolution, and angular momentum transfer, filling a gap in existing star-planet interaction studies.
Findings
Rotating stellar models without tidal interactions match observed red giant rotations.
Tidal interactions are necessary to explain fast-rotating red giants.
Faster stellar rotation decreases the minimum initial planet distance to avoid engulfment.
Abstract
Context. As a star evolves, the planet orbits change with time due to tidal interactions, stellar mass losses, friction and gravitational drag forces, mass accretion and evaporation on/by the planet. Stellar rotation modifies the structure of the star and therefore the way these different processes occur. Changes of the orbits, at their turn, have an impact on the rotation of the star. Aims. Models accounting in a consistent way for these interactions between the orbital evolution of the planet and the evolution of the rotation of the star are still missing. The present work is a first attempt to fill this gap. Methods. We compute the evolution of stellar models including a comprehensive treatment of rotational effects together with the evolution of planetary orbits, so that the exchanges of angular momentum between the star and the planetary orbit are treated in a self-consistent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · History and Developments in Astronomy
