# Rotation Period Evolution in Low-Mass Binary Stars: The Impact of Tidal   Torques and Magnetic Braking

**Authors:** David P. Fleming, Rory Barnes, James R. A. Davenport, Rodrigo Luger

arXiv: 1903.05686 · 2019-09-04

## TL;DR

This study investigates how tidal forces, stellar evolution, and magnetic braking influence the rotation periods of low-mass binary stars, revealing complex interactions that affect stellar spin-down and challenge gyrochronology.

## Contribution

It introduces a comprehensive analysis of tidal and magnetic effects on binary star rotation, comparing models and explaining observed subsynchronous rotators.

## Key findings

- Many binaries with P_orb < 20 days tidally lock.
- Tidal torques produce fast rotators not explained by single-star models.
- Magnetic braking and tides can create long-lived subsynchronous rotators.

## Abstract

We examine how tides, stellar evolution, and magnetic braking shape the rotation period (P$_{rot}$) evolution of low-mass stellar binaries up to orbital periods (P$_{orb}$) of 100 d across a wide range tidal dissipation parameters using two common equilibrium tidal models. We find that many binaries with P$_{orb} < 20$ d tidally lock, and most with $P_{orb} < 4$ d tidally lock into synchronous rotation on circularized orbits. At short P$_{orb}$, tidal torques produce a population of fast rotators that single-star only models of magnetic braking fail to produce. In many cases, we show that the competition between magnetic braking and tides produces a population of subsynchronous rotators that persists for Gyrs, even in short P$_{orb}$ binaries, qualitatively reproducing the subsynchronous eclipsing binaries (EBs) discovered in the Kepler field by Lurie et al. (2017). Both equilibrium tidal models predict that binaries can tidally-interact out to P$_{orb} \approx 80$ d, while the Constant Phase Lag tidal model predicts that binaries can tidally lock out to P$_{orb} \approx 100$ d. Tidal torques often force the P$_{rot}$ evolution of stellar binaries to depart from the long-term magnetic braking-driven spin down experienced by single stars, revealing that P$_{rot}$ is not be a valid proxy for age in all cases, i.e. gyrochronology can underpredict ages by up to $300\%$ unless one accounts for binarity. We suggest that accurate determinations of orbital eccentricties and P$_{rot}$ can be used to discriminate between which equilibrium tidal models best describes tidal interactions in low-mass binary stars.

## Full text

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## Figures

17 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.05686/full.md

## References

98 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.05686/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.05686