Star-planet interactions: II. Is planet engulfment the origin of fast rotating red giants?
Giovanni Privitera, Georges Meynet, Patrick Eggenberger, Aline A., Vidotto, Eva Villaver, Michele Bianda

TL;DR
This study investigates whether tidal interactions and planet engulfment can explain the rapid rotation observed in some red giants, showing that such interactions can produce velocities consistent with observations.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates through stellar modeling that planet engulfment can significantly accelerate red giant surfaces, aligning with observed fast rotators and providing a plausible evolutionary scenario.
Findings
Planet engulfment can produce surface velocities above 8 km/s.
The increased rotation persists for over 30% of the red giant branch phase.
Lithium abundance may increase due to planetary material accretion.
Abstract
Context. Fast rotating red giants in the upper part of the red giant branch have surface velocities that cannot be explained by single star evolution. Aims. We check whether tides between a star and a planet followed by planet engulfment can indeed accelerate the surface rotation of red giants for a sufficient long time in order to produce these fast rotating red giants. Methods. Using rotating stellar models, accounting for the redistribution of the angular momentum inside the star by different transport mechanisms, for the exchanges of angular momentum between the planet orbit and the star before the engulfment and for the deposition of angular momentum inside the star at the engulfment, we study how the surface rotation velocity at the stellar surface evolves. Results. We show that the surface velocities reached at the end of the orbital decay due to tidal forces and planet…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
