Planetary tidal interactions and the rotational evolution of low-mass stars. The Pleiades' anomaly
Florian Gallet, Emeline Bolmont, J\'er\^ome Bouvier, St\'ephane, Mathis, Corinne Charbonnel

TL;DR
This study investigates how tidal interactions between stars and close-in planets can explain anomalies in the rotation period distribution of low-mass stars in young clusters, revealing a potential cause for observed scatter.
Contribution
The paper introduces a coupled angular momentum and orbital evolution model including tidal star-planet interactions to explain rotation period anomalies in low-mass stars.
Findings
Tidal interactions can create a kink in the rotation period distribution.
Engulfment of planets impacts stellar angular momentum significantly.
Tidal effects may account for observed scatter in young stellar clusters.
Abstract
The surface angular velocity evolution of low-mass stars is now globally understood and the main physical mechanisms involved in it are observationally quite constrained. Additionally, recent observations showed anomalies in the rotation period distribution of open clusters main sequence early K-type stars that cannot be reproduced by current angular momentum evolution model. In this work, we study the parameter space of star-planet system's configurations to investigate if including the tidal star-planet interaction in angular momentum evolution models could reproduce these rotation period distribution's anomalies. To study this effect, we use a parametric angular momentum evolution model that allows for core-envelope decoupling and angular momentum extraction by magnetized stellar wind that we coupled to an orbital evolution code where we take into account the torque due to the tides…
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