The influence of planetary engulfment on stellar rotation in metal-poor main-sequence stars
A. Oetjens (1, 2), L. Carone (1), M. Bergemann (1), A. Serenelli (3,, 4) ((1) Max-Planck-Institute for Astronomy, (2) Ruprecht-Karls-Universit\"at, Heidelberg, (3) Institute of Space Sciences (ICE, CSIC), (4) Institut, d'Estudis Espacials de Catalunya (IEEC))

TL;DR
This study models how tidal interactions and planet engulfment can cause significant increases in stellar rotation speeds in low-mass, metal-poor main-sequence stars, explaining observed anomalies.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive numerical framework combining tidal friction, magnetic braking, and stellar evolution to explain stellar rotation anomalies due to planet engulfment.
Findings
Engulfment can increase stellar rotation from 1 to over 40 km/s.
Lower metallicity stars are more prone to rapid rotation increases.
Predicted higher occurrence of fast rotators at low metallicity.
Abstract
The method of gyrochronology relates the age of its star to its rotation period. However, recent evidence of deviations from gyrochronology relations was reported in the literature. Here, we study the influence of tidal interaction between a star and its companion on the rotation velocity of the star, in order to explain peculiar stellar rotation velocities. The interaction of a star and its planet is followed using a comprehensive numerical framework that combines tidal friction, magnetic braking, planet migration, and detailed stellar evolution models from the GARSTEC grid. We focus on close-in companions from 1 to 20 M orbiting low-mass, 0.8 and 1 M, main-sequence stars with a broad metallicity range from [Fe/H] = -1 to solar. Our simulations suggest that the dynamical interaction between a star and its companion can have different outcomes, which depend on the…
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