Orbital Decay in Binaries Containing Post-Main Sequence Stars
Meng Sun, Phil Arras, Nevin N. Weinberg, Nicholas W. Troup, Steven R., Majewski

TL;DR
This paper models the orbital decay in binaries with evolved stars, considering both equilibrium and dynamical tides, and predicts critical separations where decay is rapid, comparing results with observed systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of tidal interactions in post-main sequence binaries, including new prescriptions for turbulent viscosity and detailed parameter surveys.
Findings
Dynamical tide dominates for close orbits.
Equilibrium tide dominates for wider orbits.
Critical separation for rapid decay depends on stellar mass.
Abstract
The orbital decay of binaries containing a primary sub-giant or red giant star and a stellar or substellar companion is investigated. The tide raised in the primary by the companion leads to an exchange of angular momentum between the orbit and the stellar spin, causing the orbit to contract and the primary to spin up. The rate of orbital decay is computed including both the equilibrium tide, damped by turbulent viscosity in the convective envelope, and the dynamical tide, assumed to be a traveling internal-gravity wave in the radiative core. For close binaries, the tidal forcing period is expected to be much shorter than the eddy turnover timescale in the convective envelope, and the prescription for "reduced" viscosity is an important consideration. The dynamical tide tends to dominate for the closest orbits, while the equilibrium tide dominates for more distant orbits, with the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
