Star-planet interactions. V. Dynamical and equilibrium tides in convective zones
Suvrat Rao, Georges Meynet, Patrick Eggenberger, Lionel Haemmerl\'e,, Giovanni Privitera, Cyril Georgy, Sylvia Ekstr\"om, and Christoph Mordasini

TL;DR
This paper investigates how equilibrium and dynamical tides influence the orbital evolution of planets around stars, considering stellar evolution, rotation, and planetary parameters, with a focus on convective zones during different stellar phases.
Contribution
It provides a detailed modeling of tidal interactions incorporating both equilibrium and dynamical tides across stellar evolution stages, highlighting their phase-dependent effects.
Findings
Dynamical tides significantly affect planetary orbits during PMS for fast rotators.
Equilibrium tides dominate orbital evolution during the red giant branch phase.
Dynamical tides have negligible effects for slow rotators and during the RGB phase.
Abstract
When planets are formed from the protoplanetary disk and after the disk has dissipated, the evolution of their orbits is governed by tidal interactions, friction, and gravitational drag, and also by changes in the mass of the star and planet. These interactions may change the initial distribution of the distances between the planets and their host star by expanding the original orbit, by contracting it (which may cause an engulfment of the planet by the star), or by destroying the planet. We study the evolution of the orbit of a planet orbiting its host star under the effects of equilibrium tides, dynamical tides, drag (frictional and gravitational), and stellar mass loss. We used the Geneva stellar evolution code to compute the evolution of stars with initial masses of 1 and 1.5 solar mass with different rotation rates at solar metallicity. The star is evolved from the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
