
TL;DR
This paper investigates how tidal locking affects potentially habitable exoplanets, showing that most planets in habitable zones around dwarf stars are likely to become tidally locked within 1 billion years, influencing their rotation and orbital evolution.
Contribution
It provides new models and simulations predicting tidal locking timescales and conditions for habitable exoplanets, including Kepler and TESS candidates, highlighting its significance in planetary evolution.
Findings
Most planets around GKM dwarf stars will become tidally locked within 1 Gyr.
Proxima b is likely tidally locked but may still have a non-circular orbit.
Approximately half of the Kepler habitable candidates could be tidally locked.
Abstract
Potentially habitable planets can orbit close enough to their host star that the differential gravity across their diameters can fix the rotation rate at a specific frequency, a process called tidal locking. Tidally locked planets on circular orbits will rotate synchronously, but those on eccentric orbits will either librate or rotate super-synchronously. I calculate how habitable planets evolve under two commonly-used models and find, for example, that one model predicts that the Earth's rotation rate would have synchronized after 4.5 Gyr if its initial rotation period was 3 days, it had no satellites, and it always maintained the modern Earth's tidal properties. Lower mass stellar hosts will induce stronger tidal effects on potentially habitable planets, and tidal locking is possible for most planets in the habitable zones of GKM dwarf stars. For fast rotating planets, both models…
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